Style Guide by The Economist

Style Guide by The Economist

Author:The Economist [Economist, The]
Language: eng
Format: epub, pdf
Tags: Language Arts & Disciplines, Style Manuals, Business & Economics, Business Communication, General, journalism
ISBN: 9781610399869
Google: xTI4DwAAQBAJ
Publisher: PublicAffairs
Published: 2018-06-05T20:23:23.087129+00:00


q

question-marks see punctuation.

quite In America, quite is usually an intensifying adverb similar to altogether, entirely or very; in Britain, depending on the emphasis, the tone of voice and the adjective that follows, it usually means fairly, moderately or reasonably, and often damns with faint praise.

quotes Be sparing with quotes. Direct quotes should be used when either the speaker or what was said is surprising, or when the words used are particularly pithy or graphic. Otherwise you can probably paraphrase more concisely. The most pointless quote is the inconsequential remark attributed to a nameless source: “Everyone wants to be in on the act,” says one high-ranking civil servant.

For quotation marks (inverted commas), see punctuation.



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