ABSTRACT

Punctuation Matters gives straight answers to the queries raised most frequently by practitioners in computing, engineering, medicine and science as they grapple with day-to-day tasks in writing and editing. The advice it offers is based on John Kirkman’s long experience of providing courses on writing and editing in academic centres, large companies, research organisations and government departments in the UK, Europe and in USA. Sample material discussed in the book comes from real documents from computing, engineering and scientific contexts, giving the guidelines an immediately recognisable, ‘true to life’ relevance. The advice is down-to-earth and up-to-date.

It is clearly set out in three parts:

  • part one states a policy for clear and reliable punctuation
  • part two gives a series of alphabetically arranged guidelines, to be ‘dipped into’ for guidance on how to use the main punctuation marks in English
  • part three contains appendices on paragraphing, word-division and how conventions of punctuation differ in the UK and the USA.

Punctuation Matters is the essential guide for everyone who has to write in scientific, technical and medical contexts, with clear explanations on punctuation, what it does and how to use it.

chapter |18 pages

PART 1 Policy

part |2 pages

PART 2 Guidelines

chapter 1|3 pages

Apostrophe (’)

chapter 2|3 pages

Capital Letters

chapter 3|7 pages

Colon (:)

chapter 4|19 pages

Comma (,)

chapter 5|5 pages

Dash (em rule and en rule)

chapter 6|3 pages

Ellipsis Points (...)

chapter 7|1 pages

Exclamation mark ( ! )

chapter 8|4 pages

Full Stop ( . )

chapter 9|12 pages

Hyphen ( - )

chapter 11|5 pages

Parentheses (or Brackets) ()

chapter 12|2 pages

Question Mark (?)

chapter 13|2 pages

Semi-Colon ( ; )

chapter 14|3 pages

Slash ( / )

chapter 15|2 pages

Underlining ( _ )