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- Newsgroups: alt.usage.english
- Path: sparky!uunet!destroyer!sol.ctr.columbia.edu!The-Star.honeywell.com!umn.edu!charlie
- From: charlie@umnstat.stat.umn.edu (Charles Geyer)
- Subject: Re: Apostrophes in Plural forms?
- Message-ID: <1992Nov19.000146.6117@news2.cis.umn.edu>
- Sender: news@news2.cis.umn.edu (Usenet News Administration)
- Nntp-Posting-Host: isles.stat.umn.edu
- Organization: School of Statistics, University of Minnesota
- References: <1992Nov18.054810.12567@noose.ecn.purdue.edu> <1992Nov18.141032.26433@iscnvx.lmsc.lockheed.com>
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 00:01:46 GMT
- Lines: 46
-
- srinivas@lips.ecn.purdue.edu (The Abode of Wealth) writes:
-
- > Using the full form is not an alternative here because
- > I am using abbreviations of long technical phrases and it is very tedious to
- > use the full forms a hundred times.
-
- In article <1992Nov18.141032.26433@iscnvx.lmsc.lockheed.com>
- lange@lmsc.lockheed.com writes:
-
- > That's the one most legitimate reason for acronyms.
-
- No. It's not. People managed perfectly well before acronyms to say what
- they meant. Even scientists managed. The indigestible alphabet soup that
- is much of today's scientific and technical writing is completely unnecessary.
-
- From van Leunen's Handbook for Scholars
-
- Initialisms and Acronyms
-
- With initial mania everywhere, it would be surprising if no scholars
- were infected. Treat the disease with a dose of plain old-fashioned
- words:
-
- [wrong] Negotiations then began between the Cooperative Wholesalers
- Society (CWS) and the Milk Producers Revenue Board (MPRB).
- The CWS wanted price supports; the MPRB wanted free competition.
-
- [right] Negotiations then began between the Cooperative Wholesalers
- Society and the Milk Producers Revenue Board. The wholesalers
- wanted price supports; the producers wanted free competition.
-
- One can do without acronyms if one tries, unless, of course, it is required
- by government red tape, or unless the whole field has gone so bonkers about
- initialisms that there's no hope left. I confess that I wouldn't know what
- to replace TCP/IP with, or AIDS. The best one can to in a field where the
- disease is epidemic is to avoid it as much as one can.
-
- I confess I use them myself, but never more than two or three distinct
- initialisms in a single paper, and usually ones that will be familiar
- to most of my readers (DNA, CLT, MLE).
-
- --
- Charles Geyer
- School of Statistics
- University of Minnesota
- charlie@umnstat.stat.umn.edu
-