Writing Pet Peeves 1. Failure to capitalize the word “West.” The West is a specific place just like Europe or North America. As such, it is a proper noun and its forms (e.g. Western), take a capital W. When used in the sense of a direction use a lower case w. 2. Failure to capitalize the word “Earth” when referring to the planet. It too is a place. When used in the sense of “dirt”, use the lower case e. 3. Improper use of i.e., e.g. and et al. i.e. is Latin for id est and means “that is”. e.g. is Latin for exempli gratis and means “for example”. Do not confuse them. et al. is Latin for et alii and means and others. since al. is an abbreviation it takes a period. 4. Underling anything. Underlining comes from the age of typewriters when italicizing was either unavailable or inconvenient. Italicize for emphasis. Do not italicize book or journal titles. 5. Using CAPITAL LETTERS FOR EMPHASIS. Use italics 6. Using the first person. Academic writing should be objective not subjective. The objective person is the third person. In most cases, but not all, it is better to write in the third person (one) rather than the first person (I) or second person (we, you). Use of the first person should generally be reserved for referring to personal research. 7. Confusing “their” and “there”. The word ‘their’ is the plural possessive. The word “there” means in that place. Do not confuse them. 8. Confusing “than” and “then”. “Than” is a comparative conjunction, used in the sense of: “Tom is taller than Tyler”. “Then” is usually used as an adverb and generally means at a particular time, as in “We walked to the store and then we walked home”. 9. Using possessive date ranges. When referring to the years in a particular decade, such as the 1960s, one refers to a plurality of years. Thus, the proper form is a plural form (1960s), not a possessive form (1960’s), i.e. no apostrophe. And not an abbreviated form (‘60s). 10. Over use of the word “moreover”, “furthermore”, “additionally” and words of similar ilk — and especially at the beginning of a sentence. Use such words sparingly. “Further” or “in addition” are preferable. 11. Using “firstly” and “secondly”. Although not incorrect “first” and “second” are preferable. Do not mix the two forms. 12. Using the word “amongst”. The word ‘amongst” is archaic, use “among”. 13. Improper use of embedded quotes. The proper form in social science writing is: open bracket, author, year, colon, page, close bracket, e.g. (Smith 2007:57). Occasionally a space is inserted after the colon. This is acceptable so long as it is consistent. Page 1 of 2 14. Vagueness when referring to people; e.g. “Some scientists [anthropologists, historians, people] argue [or believe] that the world is flat”. Who are these scientists? I want to know. Be specific and name them and provide a reference. 15. Using contractions such as "don't", "can't" and "won't". Write the full words. 16. Use of colloquial vocabulary. Colloquial vocabulary includes words and expressions used in everyday spoken language. They are inexact and informal. For example, instead of “we must face the fact that” use “the fact is”. 17. Use of figures of speech, clichés and idioms. Instead of “in recent years” use “recently”; instead of “a stumbling block”, use “a point of contention”; instead of “above board” use “legitimate”, etc. 18. Using rhetorical questions. Rhetorical questions are questions for which an answer is not expected. It is assumed the reader either knows the answer, or the answer is subsequently provided. Rhetorical questions risk misunderstanding. The reader might not know the answer, or might have a different answer than expected. The point can usually be made more strongly and clearly when expressed as a statement. For example, instead of “how absolute is this seemingly unbridgeable chasm between gift and commodity exchange?”, use “the chasm between gift and commodity exchange seems unbridgeable”. Rhetorical questions also make your paper wordy. See next point. 19. Being wordy. Being wordy means your sentence or paragraph conveys too little information with too many words. For instance replace “In the book by Geertz (1997) there is a statement that says…” with “Geertz (1997) states…” 20. Using the word “interesting”, as in “another interesting aspect of ….” While it may be interesting to you it may not be interesting to your reader. If you think it is interesting make it so through your writing. 21. Providing titles of articles and books referred to in the body of the essay. This is a particular instance of being wordy. Use the author-date form as above and provide the titles in the references at the end. 22. Praising or condemning authors. To praise or condemn an author is personal opinion, usually unsupportable, and almost always irrelevant to your argument. This does not mean you can not agree or disagree with them just don’t say how great their book is. 23. Page-length paragraphs. Break long paragraphs into two or more. 24. Using Wikipedia as reference. Wikipedia is constantly changing, is not peer reviewed, is written by numerous unknown authors with unknown credentials and unknown motives. It is great for gaining an understanding of the issues and basic information on a topic and can lead to more in-depth scholarly articles, but do not quote it or use it as a reference. 25. Providing the URL for copies of journal articles. Articles from journals such as the American Anthropologist, which are available from several online research databases, are essentially photocopies of the hard copy. Provide the journal title and issue only. Page 2 of 2