Chicago manual of style use of italics






















 · In the book world, The Chicago Manual of Style is the primary style guide (first published in !). This book contains over pages and instructs how to handle everything from what to italicize to how to properly use punctuation. For newspapers and periodicals, The Associated Press Style Guide holds sway. Italics for internal discourse isn't Chicago, but it's pretty widespread, and you can assume it'll be readily understood if your author does it that way. I usually leave italics for quoted thoughts in place if the manuscript comes to me with them done that way, but I'll probably discourage it if it. Chicago Headings. Level. Format. 1. Centered, Boldface or Italic Type, Headline-style Capitalization. 2. Centered, Regular Type, Headline-style Capitalization. 3. Flush Left, Boldface or Italic Type, Headline-style Capitalization. 4. Flush left, roman type, sentence-style capitalization. 5.


Note: Consult The Chicago Manual of Style to format interviews appearing in other print and non-print mediums. Notes Format: Numeral. Interview Subject-First Name first, "Interview Title,"-in quotation marks, interviewed by-First Name first, Publication Title- in italics, Month and Year of Publication: Page Number(s). 1. Dr. Don't use italics when another style or formatting option is available. Single quotation marks can work for emphasis unless they're serving a different stylistic use. Emphasis in quotations. University of Chicago () Chicago manual of style, 17th edn. Following is the breakdown between AP style and Chicago style. This is intended as a quick rundown or cheat sheet; for examples of each, please refer to the pages and sections indicated. "Neither" means that the usual headline-style (or title-style) caps still apply, but the title/name is naked as far as quotes and italics are concerned.


A. Chicago style discourages the use of italics for emphasis and frowns on the use of a question mark with an exclamation mark. Quotation marks do not usually indicate emphasis. Rather, they indicate irony or double entendre, both of which are also discouraged in academic publishing. Even in fiction, such tricks may be taken as a sign of hack. A. In Chicago style (see paragraph ), when a genus name is used in the vernacular (perhaps as in your schoolbook), you may lowercase it in roman type: the streptococcus and bacillus bacteria. If you are referring to the genus as a genus (as in ), use italics and an initial cap, whether or not it stands alone. Use headline-style for purposes of capitalization. Subheadings should begin on a new line. Subheadings can be distinguished by font-size. Ensure that each level of hierarchy is clear and consistent. Levels of subheads can be differentiated by type style, use of boldface or italics, and placement on the page, usually either centered or flush left.

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