Difference between revisions of "Titles"
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Example: | Example: | ||
''Country reports: Mexico'' | ''Country reports: Mexico'' | ||
| + | Note: there is no space before the colon but there is a space after the colon. | ||
[[Category:Notes]] | [[Category:Notes]] | ||
Revision as of 18:46, 24 February 2017
Books and reports
- Italicize the titles and subtitles.
- Capitalize only the first word of the title and the subtitle (sentence case capitalization) and all proper nouns e.g.:
Credit unions in Canada: IBISWorld industry report 52213CA (report title)
Periodical Titles
-Italicize.
- Capitalize as you would capitalize them normally, e.g.:
International Business Review (journal title)
BC Business (magazine title)
Article titles
Do not italicize. Use sentence case capitalization.
Missing title
Sometimes a source has no clear title -- this can happen with sources such as tables or maps generated from searches within some databases.
In such cases, you should write a very brief description of the resource within square brackets containing information that would help your reader find or recreate the same source (table, map, etc.) For example, your square brackets might include the variables you searched for to create a table.
Example: [Potato chips personally eaten most often: Lay's Lightly Salted, report type: demographics, base: British Columbia 12+].
Series
If it looks like a report is part of a series then list the series title first and the report title after separated by a colon.
Example: Country reports: Mexico Note: there is no space before the colon but there is a space after the colon.