The style
of the Associated Press is the gold standard for news writing. With The AP
Stylebook in hand, you can learn how to write and edit with the clarity and
professionalism for which they are famous. Fully revised and updated, this new
edition contains more than 3,000 A to Z entries—including more than 200 new
ones—detailing the AP’s rules on grammar, spelling, punctuation,
capitalization, abbreviation, and word and numeral usage. You’ll find answers
to such wide-ranging questions as:
· When should the names of government
bodies be spelled out and when should they be abbreviated?
· What are the general definitions of the
major religious movements?
· Which companies do the big media
conglomerates own?
· Who are all the members of the British
Commonwealth?
· How should box scores for baseball
games be filed?
· What constitutes “fair use”?
· What exactly does the Freedom of
Information Act cover?
With
invaluable additional sections on the unique guidelines for business and sports
reporting and on how you can guard against libel and copyright infringement,
The AP Stylebook is the one reference that all writers, editors, and students
cannot afford to be without.
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