Acronyms, Initialisms, and Other Shortened Word Forms | Usage Tips

Acronyms, Initialisms, and Other Shortened Word Forms | Usage Tips

Abbreviations, shortened words or phrases used in written work, come in many varieties. Today, I cover four—acronyms, initialisms, clippings, and contractions. (Terminology varies from one source to another, and if you think my four broad classifications are excessive, check out the twenty classifications here .) In this post, I review different abbreviated forms and provide usage tips as well as several resources and links to related dictionaries and lists. Because of the article’s structure, few citations appear inline, but the references listed at the end have extensive indexes on abbreviated forms.

Acronyms

Acronyms are created by taking the first letter of a series of words to make a new pronounceable word. They normally appear in uppercase, but lowercase forms are not that unusual.

  • ?ABBA—Agnetha, Bj?rn, Benny, Anni-Frid (the first name of each band member)
  • ?GIF—Graphics Interchange Format
  • ?laser—Light Amplification by Stimulated Emission of Radiation
  • ?NOAA—National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration
  • ?UNESCO—United Nations Education, Scientific and Culture Organization
  • ?Yahoo—Yet Another Hierarchical Officious Oracle (yes, the internet and media company)

Some of the daily life and pop culture acronyms may be a bit surprising—Did you know about Yahoo and ABBA?

Usage note: As a rule, do not include articles (the, a, or an) before acronyms when used as a noun, which is most of the time, so “the UNESCO” and “the NOAA” are not acceptable constructions. There are exemptions, however, “a GIF,” for example. Exceptions are often based on conventional use. When used as adjectives, acronyms are always preceded with articles, so “a UNESCO publication” and “the NOAA guidelines” are both okay.

Initialisms

Abbreviations with individually pronounced letters are initialisms. Generally (but not always) created by taking the first letter of a series of words, initialisms come in two varieties, all caps and all lowercase. Uppercase (all caps) forms do not usually have punctuation between the letters. Things become a bit more complicated with lowercase initialism because American and British usage can sometimes differ. For example, American usage for ante meridiem usually appears as a.m. while British usage can be am; however, this is not a steadfast rule since Oxford (2014, 195) recommends using the non-punctuated style. It is complicated. If in doubt, use punctuation with lowercase initialisms.

  • ATMautomated teller machine
  • CGIcomputer-generated imagery
  • FBIFederal Bureau of Investigation
  • GCSEGeneral Certificate of Secondary Education
  • MI6Military Intelligence, Section 6
  • XML—eXtensible Markup Language

Articles typically come before an initialism—the FBI, the UN, the UK, an ATM, etc. However, like with acronyms, there are several exceptions to the rule, and these are also based on conventional use—MI6 and XML, for example do not take an article. Applying an indefinite article (a or an), depends on how the initialism is pronounced. If the first letter sounds like a vowel as with MA, use an, yes even though the M stands for “master’s.” Both of these are correct: “I got an MA in culture studies.” “I got a master’s of arts degree in culture studies.”

Do You Want to Annoy People?

Probably yes, but if no, then don’t repeat the full word that the last letter an acronym or initialism represents, as in “PIN number,” “HIV virus,” “LCD display,” and “ATM machine,” to name a few. Most people don’t like that. However, if you really do want to be bothersome, you have carte blanche access to a whole new way of being annoying. Take care, and good luck.

Clippings

Clippings are so called because they are formed by clipping away parts of a word to make a shorter form of the same word. There are two types: those treated as new words and those that are not. An example of a clipping treated as a new word is “sus” as it appears in the cover image above. It is a clipping of “suspect” or “suspicious.”

  • ad or advertadvertisement (two types of clipping possible)
  • alumalumni (masculine form but used for males and females) or alumnae (feminine)
  • appapplication
  • blog—weblog
  • cellphonecellular phone (technically called a blend)
  • flu—influenza
  • gasgasoline
  • gymgymnasium
  • lablaboratory
  • petrolpetroleum
  • vlogvideo weblog (technically called a blend)

Be sure to notice that this type of clipping does not have any punctuation, and the reason is that they are themselves independent words.

On the other hand, the second type of clipping does include punctuation. These are more broadly known as “abbreviations,” but I wanted to give a more specific categorization for a reason that will be explained in the next section.

  • add.—addendum
  • app.—appendix (different meaning to the clipping above with no punctuation)
  • ch.—chapter
  • dist.—district
  • ea.—each
  • fig.—figure
  • Jan.—January
  • L. or Lat.—Latin
  • Sun.—Sunday

With this form, the full word is spoken even if the shortened form is written. For example, “ch.,” is read as / ?t??pt? / not / ?t? /.

Contractions

Like clippings, contractions come as two types, and both generally include punctuation if you are from the US. The first type of contraction, also generically called an abbreviation, is often used with titles. [For more information about the differences in American and British punctuation with titles, see my previous post on the subject (https://www.dhirubhai.net/pulse/american-british-english-some-notes-unesco-style-usage-peterson/ ).]

  • Mr.—Mister
  • Mrs.—Mistress (etymologically, an honorific feminine form of Mister)
  • Dr.—Doctor
  • St.—Saint

Notice how contractions differ from clippings. Clippings include successive letters of a word, generally at the beginning or end; contracted forms, however, have letters from the front and back and sometimes the middle of a word, hence the different classification.

The next kind of contraction should be familiar enough. The standard punctuation is the apostrophe ( ’ ). You likely know the common ones, so won’t, can’t, and don’t are not included in the following list.

  • gov’tgovernment
  • ma’ammadam
  • ’n’—and (as in rock ’n’ roll)
  • ol’old
  • ’til—until
  • ’tis—it is

Notice the direction of the apostrophes ( ’ ); they are equivalent to a right single quote, even if they appear at the beginning of the word. It might seem like a small thing, but it matters in a big way. If the punctuation faces the other way, then it marks the beginning of a quote, which is not what we are doing with an apostrophe. Don’t include terminal punctuation either. Also keep in mind that contractions like the ones listed are generally “used only in writing that aims for a relaxed, colloquial tone” (Sabin 2010, 170).

Conclusion

This article may seem a touch long, but it is really about the same as usual; the long lists deceive. Below are a few acronym and abbreviation sites you might find useful.

All Acronyms provides searches by keyword, by category browsing, and by other methods, explore the site for more information.

Keyword: https://www.allacronyms.com

Category: https://www.allacronyms.com/aa-categories

Oxford University Press has a free public-access list of common abbreviations that appear in the Oxford English Dictionary. The list is quite extensive; however, it is not as exhaustive as the 100,000+ available in A Dictionary of Abbreviations, but this Oxford Reference site is behind a paywall.?

Abbreviation list: https://public.oed.com/how-to-use-the-oed/abbreviations/#i

Dictionary of abbreviations (behind a paywall): https://bit.ly/2KHnSXS

Wikipedia has a general list of abbreviations with links to several categories as well as a dedicated page of acronyms with additional links.

Abbreviations: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_abbreviations

Acronyms: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lists_of_acronyms

References

The Associated Press Stylebook 2020–2022. 55th ed. 2020. New York: Basic Books.

The Chicago Manual of Style. 17th ed. 2017. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.

Crystal, David. 2019. The Cambridge Encyclopedia of the English Language. 3rd ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

?. 2008. A Dictionary of Linguistics and Phonetics. 6th ed. Oxford: Blackwell Publishing.

The Economist Style Guide. 12th ed. 2018. London: Profile Books Ltd.

Garner, Bryan A. 2003. Garner’s Modern American Usage. New York: Oxford University Press.

New Hart’s Rules: The Oxford Style Guide. 2nd ed. 2014. New York: Oxford University Press.

Petelin, Roslyn. 2022. How Writing Works: A Field Guide to Effective Writing. 2nd ed. New York: Routledge.

Sabin, William A. 2010. The Gregg Reference Manual: A Manual of Style, Grammar, Usage, and Formatting—Tribute Edition. 11th ed. New York: McGraw-Hill.

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