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Double quotes for dialogue or speech, terms or phrases, and scare quotes. For dialogue and speech, end-punctuation is inside the quote. Otherwise it is outside, or there is no punctuation. | Double quotes for dialogue or speech, terms or phrases, and scare quotes. For dialogue and speech, end-punctuation is inside the quote. Otherwise it is outside, or there is no punctuation. | ||
Single quotes for thoughts. If it the sentence ends inside a single quote, end punctuation is placed inside the quote. | |||
==== Indirect Quotations ==== | ==== Indirect Quotations ==== |
Latest revision as of 18:43, 26 April 2021
Style guide for The Portal Transcripts. Link.
Word Processor Configuration[edit]
- Disable smart quotes
- Disable Substitutions
Spelling Help[edit]
Search for unknown terms or names, or search for some of the words in their context to find their proper spelling.
Headings[edit]
Generally, our transcripts will be posted on pages under a level 2 heading, so any subheadings in the transcript should begin at a level 3 heading.
Paragraphs[edit]
Paragraphs should contain a whole idea.
Paragraph Breaks[edit]
Paragraph breaks don't always have to be for total change of topic. The next subtopic in a line of thought can be broken into its own paragraph to help readability. More paragraphs also = more timestamps.
Timestamp[edit]
The timestamp is italicized, always of the form 00:00:00 (hours:minutes:seconds). It marks the beginning of a paragraph. It is separated by a line break (shift+enter) instead of a paragraph break. This can be checked by triple-clicking a paragraph to select it, and seeing whether the timestamp is also highlighted as part of the selection.
Speaker Tag[edit]
The speaker tag is bold, punctuated by a colon, and in-line with the paragraph.
Punctuation[edit]
Our punctuation rules.
Commas[edit]
Use the Oxford comma.
Comma before single and double quotes that begin a new clause.
Hyphenation[edit]
Hyphenate certain words.
Dashes[edit]
Em-dash or long dash (â) for interruptions (mid-word or mid-sentence) or abrupt change in a sentence's topic. No space after the dash.
En-dash in certain
Ellipses[edit]
Ellipses can be used in some places instead of dashes, if a speaker is trailing off for instance. Put a space after ellipses. They can be treated as periods or commas for the capitalization of the next word.
Quotations[edit]
Comma before single and double quotes that begin a new clause.
Double quotes for dialogue or speech, terms or phrases, and scare quotes. For dialogue and speech, end-punctuation is inside the quote. Otherwise it is outside, or there is no punctuation.
Single quotes for thoughts. If it the sentence ends inside a single quote, end punctuation is placed inside the quote.
Indirect Quotations[edit]
Indirect quotes (no quote marks) when it's hypothetical speech or . Use your own judgment. No comma before indirect quotes. Don't capitalize first word of indirect quotes.
Capitalization[edit]
Capitalize essay titles.
Capitalize book titles.
Acronyms[edit]
Acronyms are capitalized and unpunctuated: PhD, UK, USA, DISC, etc.
Slogans that reduce to acronyms are capitalized, i.e. "Make America Think Harder (MATH)".
Name acronyms are capitalized and punctuated: M.C. Escher.
Portal Terms[edit]
Portal terms aren't capitalized: embedded growth obligation, gated institutional narrative, etc.
However, Portal terms that are explicitly proper nouns are capitalized: The Portal, Wokistan, Magastan
Italicization[edit]
Italicize book titles.
Italicize foreign language phrases/terms i.e. sine qua non, unless they're in quotes that aren't dialogue quotes.
Numbers[edit]
Numbers greater than ten should be written out as numerals. Numbers less than ten can also be written as numerals so long as it's internally consistent within a transcript.
Year references like "seventies" and "eighties" should be rendered as '70s, '80s.
Mathematics[edit]
Math grammar rules here.
Typesetting[edit]
LaTeX compatible with MathJax.
Editor's Notes[edit]
When necessary, add a missing, unspoken word to clarify the meaning of a sentence, i.e. [if], [the], etc. "... I have seen no printed discussion of where the supposed trading records of this person [are, who seemed to amass a fortune."]
If there is an obvious flaw in grammar of something spoken, add [sic] after the mistake, i.e. "I didnât felt [sic ..."]
If something is inaudible or unintelligible, write [inaudible] or [unintelligible] where it occurs.
Miscellaneous[edit]
For words that end in "m" extended with -my, add the ending to the existing word, don't conjugate it. "Spectrum" + "-my" = "Spectrummy"