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Libraries House Style Guide: Home

Terms & more

 academic degrees  See: MIT Internal Communications style sheet
 acronyms/abbreviations   See: MIT Internal Communications style sheet
 alumni  Indicate when a person (including Libraries staff) is an alumnus/a of MIT with the year(s) of graduation
 ampersands (&)  Avoid using in running text -- spell out “and.” Exceptions: if it is part of a company or organization's official name (e.g., AT&T) or if space is limited on the website or digital signage
 Ask Us  We used to include the exclamation point, but no more.
 Borrow Direct  Capitalize
 commas  Use the Oxford (or serial) comma (example: "students, faculty, and staff")
 dashes  Note the difference between the em dash (—), the slightly narrower en dash (–), and the even narrower hyphen (-). Em dashes can take the places of commas, parentheses, or colons. Use a space on either side. En dashes indicate a range or span (e.g., 2–4 p.m.). Hyphens are used in compound terms and in phone numbers.
 dates  Do not use ordinals (example: January 1 not January 1st)
 DSpace
 DSpace@MIT
 Use DSpace when referring to the software.
 Use DSpace@MIT when referring to our digital repository.
 e- or electronic  Make sure the context is clear. Consider audience and whether the concept is familiar. (examples: e-resources, e-reserves)
 ebook vs e-book  Use e-book
 email vs e-mail  Use email
 the Institute  Capitalize "Institute" when referring to MIT
 Internet  Capitalize Internet as a noun, but not as an adjective (ex: "internet resources")
 Libraries'  Note correct position of the possessive plural apostrophe in constructions such as "Libraries' website," "MIT Libraries' policy," etc.
 Libraries, the  Always capitalize the word "Libraries" in "the MIT Libraries" or "the Libraries" when MIT Libraries are meant
 Libraries, the  Plural. Ex: "The Libraries are eager to engage the community."
 library, as adj.  OK to use as adjective, but do not capitalize it
 library, the  Lower-case "the library" even when referring to a particular library
 log in  As verb: two words
 login  As noun or adjective: one word. Ex: "the login screen"
 MIT  Use "MIT," not "M.I.T."  Use "an" as article with "MIT"
 Ex: "an MIT thesis" (General rule is you choose the article based on the way the acronym is pronounced.)
 MIT addresses  Use Building, not Room (Institute style).
 Ex: "Building 14S-216" or just "14S-216"
 MIT Libraries, the  Singular when referring to the organization as a whole
 Ex. "The MIT Libraries is committed to..."
 MITL  Do not use to refer to MIT Libraries
 ordinals  Spell out first through ninth; otherwise, use numerals and letters. Do not use superscript.
 Ex: "the 10th anniversary"
 pdf vs PDF  Use "pdf"
 staff, n.  Collective nouns such as "team" and "staff" may be either singular or plural depending on use in a sentence.   Examples: The staff is in a meeting. The staff are in disagreement about the findings.
 telephone numbers  Use hyphen between each set of numbers.
 titles (for jobs)  In news stories, capitalize formal titles only when they precede an individual's name.
 URLs  Do not include "www."
 Do not include a final slash after the last directory:
 Correct: libraries.mit.edu/barker
 Your Account  Capitalize