User:Amgine/SG Details-H

Amgine's style guide details
0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
half
edit

Can be either plural or singular; "half the chocolates were eaten" and "half the food was eaten."

Hassidic
edit

Not Hasidic, Chasidic, or Chassidic.

Hawaii, Hawaiian
edit

It is more correct to use Hawaiʻi, using the okina, however the official state name was anglicized in the process of becoming a part of the USA, and is the more common usage. When doing a story about native Hawaiʻians, however, prefer their spelling.

hay fever
edit

No hyphen.

headache
edit

Avoid use as a synonym of difficulties, problems.

headed
edit

Avoid. Use is heading.

headline notes
edit

The Wikinews Style Guide on headlines is more complete and is canonical.

  • Omit needless words.
    Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary parts. This requires not that the writer make all his sentences short, or that he avoid all detail and treat his subjects only in outline, but that every word tell. Strunk
heads of state
edit

Not always the head of government.

Generally, Title Name of Country, with subsequent mention as the Title.

health care
edit

Two words as a noun, hyphenated when used adjectivally.

heaven
edit

And hell - lowercased.

heavenly bodies
edit

Capitalize the proper names of heavenly bodies, but not a descriptor if any. e.g. Halley's comet. Lowercase adjectives lunar, solar, and phases of the moon, but capitalize Martian both adjectivally and as a noun.

homosexual
edit

See gay.

honorific
edit

See Social titles

The terms doctor, mister, mistress, miss, monsieur, misters and messieurs, and sir are common social titles used before names in news articles. Formal journalism uses the appropriate title before the surname after the initial full name use. "Joseph Estrada, ousted President of the Philippines, lost a second bid for the office. Mr Estrada..."

honours, honors
edit

People are appointed to or receive national honours; never made, given, or awarded. Certain ranks of nobility (in the United Kingdom, Peers and above) are created, not appointed, &c. Omit honours and decorations after names.

however
edit

Avoid use where possible, as it is usually verbosity. When used in the sense nevertheless, always requires a following comma (and leading comma when inserted into a sentence.) Note the comma in the extended clause: "However many times I say this, there are people who ignore it."

hyphens
edit

Use hyphens (-, not – nor —) in compound adjectives and nouns, in names, and in numbers such as phone numbers. They can be used in "spelling out" a word for emphasis (j-o-u-r-n-a-l-i-s-m). General rule of hyphenation: Use to improve understanding.

Usually run together prefixes rather than hyphenate, except where the last letter of the prefix is the same as the first letter of the word to which it attaches. Thus postwar, nonconformist, but re-establish and pre-empt.

Do not use dangling hyphens with stand-alone words for emphasis, but do use them with prefixes. e.g. full and part-time, but pre- and post-war economies.

See also: dashes.