PAPER TITLE IN SMALL CAPS, BOLD, AND CENTERED* Author Name University of Where Please omit the name, affiliation, and other identifying information on the version which you initially submit, and provide your name and affiliation on a separate page. Include a short abstract of about 100 words that highlights the main points of the paper. This is set in 9 point type, and the left and right margins of the abstract are at .5 inch further in at the left and right. There might be a brief preliminary discussion before the first numbered section. Numbered sections start with 1. 1. Section Title Preliminary discussion or the first major claim will be discussed now. A subsection may eventually become necessary.1 1.1 Subsection. The presentation continues. We will now introduce some data and refer to the examples in (1a), also those in (1b). 10 The identifying letter is tabbed in by .5 inch, and the leftmost column of data is tabbed .25 inch from that point. Glosses are in single quotes. (1) a. b. * 1 akabika sadza ‘he cooked porridge’ achabika sadza ‘he will cook porridge’ achatora badza ‘he will take a hoe’ achatora banga ‘he will take a knife’ Acknowledgements, previous presentations. Footnotes are in 9 pt, exactly 11 pt line-spacing. Footnotes, rather than endnotes, are to be used. 58 Studies in African Linguistics 43(1&2), 2014 We continue the presentation and refer to another display of data without letter subdivision, and here the data column in tabbed in .5 inch. In this case we also introduce interlinear glosses, which are in 12 point. (2) anotora mabhuku ‘he takes books’ he takes books anoziva Chipo he knows Chipo ‘he knows Chipo’ 2. Another Section The presentation continues, with a quote from Smith (1978): Like the abstract, the quote is set in 9 pt type, the left margin is set at .5 inch and the right margin is set at 5 inches. The quote ends with the page numbers in this manner. [p 5] The paper concludes with references. There are 4 blank lines to the label and one blank line after. References have a hanging indentation of .2 inch, and a blank line after. References are to adhere to the CELxJ standards listed here. References Andersen, Torben. 1988c. Ergativity in Päri, a Nilotic OVS language. Lingua 75:289-324. Clark, Mary M. 1993. Representation of downstep in Dschang Bamileke. In Hulst, Harry van der & Keith Snider(eds.), The Phonology of Tone: The Representation of Tonal Register, 2973. Berlin & New York: Mouton de Gruyter. Elugbe, Ben. 1989. Comparative Edoid: phonology and lexicon. Port Harcourt: University of Port Harcourt Press. Goldsmith, John. 1976. Autosegmental phonology. Cambridge: MIT, PhD. dissertation. Distributed by IULC.