ISSN
1076-9005
Journal
of Buddhist Ethics Style Guide |
Questions
or suggestions on JBE house style or this style sheet? Contact Jennifer
McCay at mccayj@ivillage.com.
General Guidelines
copyediting
done according to the Chicago Manual of Style, 14th edition
American
(i.e., not British) English
use serial
commas
1500s, not
1500's
"1960s,"
not "sixties"
periods
and commas go inside quotation marks
semicolons
and colons go outside quotation marks
commas after
"e.g." and "i.e."
no "smart"
(curly) quotation marks
"em" dashes
should be denoted by XXX with a space on either side (because of translation
problems between machines)
space between
initials in a name (e.g., J. P. Smith)
titles like
"assistant book editor" are not capitalized (unless used in a heading)
numbers
one to ninety-nine are written out; numbers 100 and over are in numerals
(but "36 percent")
approximations
in place of numbers are written out (e.g., "around eight hundred")
"chapter
one," "chapter two," etc., not "chap. 1" or "Chapter One" or "Chapter 1"
"seventh
century," not "Seventh Century" or "7th Century"
650 B.C.,
A.D. 1998, 621 B.C.E.
March 5,
not March 5th
numbered
lists and footnotes in text: (1)...(2)..., etc. (no superscripts)
change fractions
to decimals where possible
pages 232-238,
not 232-38; 1980-1984, not 1980-84
conference
titles such as "Buddhism and Human Rights" are in quotation marks,
not italics
book titles
are italicized; article titles are enclosed in quotation marks
JBE does
not use tabs and does not indent new paragraphs; new paragraphs flush left
with a line space between paragraphs
page number
references within the text are formatted: (p. 1), with a space between
the "p." and the number
Articles and Book Reviews
For examples
of articles in "house" style and examples of header style and information,
see the Web page.
Please
consult www.amazon.com for missing
publication information on reviews.
Foreign Language Issues
All technical
terms in Buddhist languages, excepting proper names, will be italicized.
Decisions regarding the technical terms in Buddhist languages will be made
by the Book Review Editor
in the case of book reviews and the General
Editors in the case of articles. Authors should direct queries about
technical
terms to the above individuals and not the JBE Copyeditor.
Sanskrit
and Pali
With
regard to Sanskrit and Pali terms, transliterations will follow the forms
in
the
_Sanskrit-English Dictionary_ by Monier-Williams, the _Buddhist Hybrid
Sanskrit
Dictionary_ by Edgerton, and the _Pali-English Dictionary_ by Rhys
Davids
and Stede. The form of transliteration used is as follows:
long vowels
are doubled
consonantal
diacritics precede the consonants marked by them; thus retroflex consonants
are written as .r .t .th .d .dh .n
.m .s
visarga
is written as .h
the palatals
that take diacritics are ~n and "s
the gutteral
nasal is written "n
da.n.da
is written |
The Wylie
system of Tibetan transliteration requires no diacritical marks.
Chinese
can be romanized by either the pinyin or Wade-Giles system.
Japanese
requires only doubled vowels for romanization, which can be treated as
indicated above for Sanskrit.
STYLE
SHEET
Spelling/Hyphenation/Capitalization
Please
note that queries concerning the transliteration of terms in Buddhist
languages
should be sent here
and not addressed to the JBE Copyeditor.
a priori
(no italics)
acknowledgment
adviser
aesthetic
afterward
all
right
Americanize
analogue
ancien
régime, the (no italics)
anglicize
anti-Semitic
arabic
numerals
Asian
American (family)
AUM
B.A.
bachelor's
degree
behavior
benefited
best-known
Bhagavad
Gita (no italics)
Bible,
the
biblical
big
bang theory
bioethics
Bronze
Age
Buddha,
the
Buddhahood
Buddhist
Buddhist
ethics
Buddhist
Studies
call
for papers
canceled
catalog
chapter
one
Christian
Christlike
civilization
classical
coauthor
coeditor
color
consensus
coorigination
copyeditor
criticize
Dark
Ages, the
de facto
(no italics)
descendant
doctor's
degree
download
dukkha
e.g.
-- change to "for example" where possible
the
East, Eastern
ecosystem
ego-self
Eightfold
Path, the
e-mail
embarrass
endeavor
Enlightenment,
the
etc.
-- change to "and so forth" where possible
fall
(the season)
ff.
fin
de siècle (no italics)
First
Noble Truth
Five
Precepts, the
fluorescent
foresee
Four
Noble Truths, the
fulfillment
Gelugpa
order
generalize
glamorous
glamour
Golden
Rule, the
green
revolution
harass
hell-being
Hinduism
homepage
homeric
HTML
i.e.
-- change to "that is" where possible
ibid.
(no italics)
idiosyncrasy
inasmuch
indispensable
Indo-European
inoculate
Internet
Iron
Age
JBE
Jew
Journal
of Buddhist Ethics
judgment
karma
karuna
labeled
laissez-faire
(no italics)
lay
people
layman
liaison
lightning
Listserv
litre
M.A.
macroeconomics
matter-of-fact
metre
midcentury
Middle
Ages, the
middle-class
voters; the middle class
mid-June
millennium
Muslim
mustache
neo-Darwinian
Neolithic
neoorthodox
nonattachment
nondualistic
nonessential
nonexistence
nonhuman
nonperson
nonsentient
nonviolent
non-Western
ongoing
online
Pali
canon
percent
Ph.D.
postdoctoral
pp.
preconference
preempt
president
(of the United States); President Clinton
privilege
pro-life
protolanguage
prototypical
pseudoheroic
quasi
scholar (no hyphen, no italics)
rabbi,
the; Rabbi Salzman
reaffirm
reedit
reestablish
reexamine
Renaissance,
the
resistance
reunify
Rig-Veda
(no italics)
roman
numerals
romantic
period
roshi,
the; Roshi Zimmer (no italics)
savior
self-consciousness
self-reliant
Shingon
Shintoism
Sixteenth
Gyalwa Karmapa
sixth-century
poet
socioeconomic
Southeast
Asia
space
age
spring
(the season)
Stone
Age
sturm
und drang (no italics)
supersede
supraliminal
Tantra
Tantric
Taoism
theater
Three
Jewels, the
Three
Treasures, the
three-quarters
(of a mile)
totaled
toward
toward
(not towards)
transsocietal
Tripi.taka
(italics)
tropic
of Cancer
underused
unselfconscious
unshakable
Upani.sads
(italics)
upload
up-to-date
Vedaanta
Vedas
(italics)
Vedic
Vinaya
(italics)
viz.
-- change to "namely" where possible
web page
website
well-known
the
West, Western
World
Wide Web
worldwide
Journal
of Buddhist Ethics
revised
4 November1999