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  • Acronyms: spell them out the first time.

  • Ampersands: do not use these in the main text or headings. It is fine to use them in menus, if you need to save space.

  • Capitals: do not use all capitals for emphasis or in headings.

  • Data: treat as singular (“Data is…”). (Whether “data” is singular or plural is contentious - see the Wikipedia article and this Guardian article.)

  • Dates: use Wednesday 7 July 2021 (not Wednesday 7th July 2021, or other variations).

  • Datasets: not “data sets”.

  • Email: not “e-mail”.

  • Email addresses: spell these out and make the email address the link e.g. rdm-toolkit@elixir-europe.org. Do not hide the email address behind a word or phrase like “contact us”.

  • Etc. should be avoided. Try using “for example” or “such as” or “including” at the start of a listing. If etc. is used, put a comma before it if it is in a list, like “A, B, etc.”.

  • FAIR Metroline: when referring to the FAIR Metroline, use a capital “M”.

  • Gender: avoid using gender-specific words like “he” or “she”.

  • Headings:

    • Only the first word is capitalised, unless other words are proper nouns.

    • Headings must be hierarchical. They must go down in order (level one, level two, level three) , and not skip a level. It is fine to skip levels when moving back up e.g. you can skip from level four to level two.

  • -ise/-ize: use the “-ise” form.

  • Life cycle: two separate words.

  • Links: make the link text say where the link goes e.g. “the Contribute page”, not “click here”. Avoid using the url as the link text.

  • Lists:

    • A list of short items: introduce with a colon, start each bullet point with a capital and don’t use punctuation at the end of each bullet point:

      • Item 1

      • Item 2

    • A list of longer items following an incomplete introductory sentence (e.g. a sentence ending in a colon): each item ends with a semi colon and the final item ends with a full stop. Do not capitalise the first letter of each item e.g. This is the first part of a sentence that includes:

      • a longer item 1;

      • a longer item 2;

      • a longer item 3.

    • A list following a complete sentence (with a full stop): each item ends with a full stop and each point begins with a capital letter e.g. This a complete sentence.

      • This is item 1 of the list.

      • This is item 2 of the list.

      • This is item 3 of the list.

  • Numbers: spell the numbers one to ten out. After that, write the numbers (11, 12, 13, etc.).

  • Quotations: use double quotes for quotations, and single quotes for quotes within quotes.

  • References: add references directly in the text, e.g. “According to FAIRifcation models, such as FAIRopoly…”.

  • That/which: use “that” when you are defining something and “which” when you are adding extra information about it e.g.:

    • “The cat that was on the table suddenly got up” is telling us which cat it was. It is important to the meaning of the sentence because you are not talking about any cat, just the cat on the table.

    • “The cat, which was sitting on the table, suddenly got up” is giving us extra information about the cat. The information is not necessary to understand the sentence. You can remove the clause and the sentence will still be clear. Clauses starting with “which” usually begin with a comma.

  • Titles (the “title” in the front matter of pages): only the first word, proper nouns and acronyms are capitalised.

  • Training: training is an uncountable noun and cannot have a plural. You can write “training courses” and “training materials” but not “trainings”.

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