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AP Style D
Descripción
hashtag cute n fun ;)
Sin etiquetas
ap style
journalism
chapter d
Mapa Mental por
Joe Cruz
, actualizado hace más de 1 año
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Creado por
Joe Cruz
hace alrededor de 9 años
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Resumen del Recurso
AP Style D
Damage vs. Damages
Damage = Destruction
"Authorities said damage from the storm would total more than $1 billion"
Damages = Awarded by a court as compensation for injury, loss, etc
"The woman received $25,00 in damages"
Datelines
Contain a CITY NAME (all caps) followed by name of the state, country or territory.
In citing OTHER cities within the body of a story
No further info necessary if a city is in same state as city in Dateline
Follow the city name with further ID in most cases where it is not in the same state of dateline city.
DO NOT refer to Boston, Mass., in a story with the dateline NEW YORK
Demolish vs. Destroy
Both = completely. Something cannot be partially demolished or destroyed. It is redundant to say "totally demolished" or "totally destroyed"
Department
List the subject first in news stories, A phrase such as "the department" should be used on the second reference
"Agriculture Department and Commerce Department"
Exceptions = "Department of Homeland Security"
lowercase "department" in plural uses, but CAPITALIZE THE PROPER NAME ELEMENT
"the departments of Labor and Justice."
"Kissinger said, 'State and Justice must resolve their differences." VS. "Henry Kissinger, the secretary of the state."
lowercase the department whenever it stands alone.
In stories with US datelines, do not include "U.S." before the titles of government officials.
Differnent
Takes the preposition "from"
Dimensions
Spell out "inches, feet, yards," and use figures to indicate and hyphenate adjectival forms before nouns.
Depth, height, length, width
"He is 5 feet 6 inches tall." VS. "The 5-foot 6-inch man."
"The storm left 5 inches of snow"
Use apostrophe to indicate feet and quote marks to indicate inches (5'6'') only in technical contexts.
Directions vs. Regions
lowercase for compass directions
"He drove west, the cold front is moving east"
Capitalize to designate regions
"The North was victorious, the South shall rise again, The candidate developed a Southern strategy."
With Nation Name, Lowercase unless part of proper name or are used to designate a politically divided nation.
northern France, western United States.
Northern Ireland, South Korea
Disabled, Handicapped
Avoid descriptions that connote pity, such as "afflicted with" or "suffers from"
Dollars
ALWAYS lowercase and don't link numerals and word by a hyphen.
"he is worth $4.35 million. He proposed a $300 billion budget."
Drunk, Drunken
Drunk= Spelling of the adjective used AFTER a form of the verb to be. "He was drunk"
Drunken = The spelling of the adjective used BEFORE NOUNS. "A drunken driver. Drunken driving."
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