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Author
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Topic: Style question: space shuttle capitalization
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KC Stoever Member Posts: 1012 From: Denver, CO USA Registered: Oct 2002
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posted 08-26-2006 04:40 PM
Editing a document: Is the shuttle (as in "the shuttle") upper- or lowercased? |
Robert Pearlman Editor Posts: 42988 From: Houston, TX Registered: Nov 1999
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posted 08-26-2006 04:47 PM
The current trend appears to be to use lowercase. Thus, "space shuttle" or "shuttle."When naming the orbiters, it is "space shuttle Discovery" or "shuttle Atlantis." The Associated Press uses this format and as a result, many (including NASA) do, too. |
KC Stoever Member Posts: 1012 From: Denver, CO USA Registered: Oct 2002
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posted 08-26-2006 06:48 PM
Thanks, Rob. cS is faster than poring through the online Chicago Manual of Style! |
FFrench Member Posts: 3161 From: San Diego Registered: Feb 2002
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posted 08-26-2006 07:08 PM
Sounds right to me, as "shuttle" was essentially a nickname for what was formally called the "Space Transportation System" for most of its life. Although, a few years back, they officially changed the name to space shuttle, didn't they? |
Danno Member Posts: 572 From: Ridgecrest, CA - USA Registered: Jun 2000
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posted 08-26-2006 11:05 PM
I still work with old timers who refer to it as "the NASA" ...and they only refer to the shuttle as "the orbiter." |
kosmonavtka Member Posts: 170 From: Melbourne, Victoria, Australia Registered: Aug 2003
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posted 08-27-2006 03:48 PM
NASA's guide to punctuation and grammar (found by Googling nasa punctuation) states proper names of spaceships (Atlantis, etc.) should be in italics. |
KC Stoever Member Posts: 1012 From: Denver, CO USA Registered: Oct 2002
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posted 08-27-2006 07:33 PM
NASA likely follows the aggressively "up" or "uppercase" style favored by the GPO and deplored by scholarly publishers. Italicizing ships, however, is a convention everyone honors. But I think names of missions — say Apollo 13 — are spelled roman (unitalicized). Freedom 7, however, as a ship, would appear in italics. Too bad NASA chose, sometime during Gemini, to drop the honorable tradition of naming its spacecraft. |
DavidH Member Posts: 1217 From: Huntsville, AL, USA Registered: Jun 2003
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posted 08-28-2006 09:59 AM
Current NASA Portal style is that space shuttle is lowercase on its own, but capitalized before the name of an orbiter. Brent Jett is a space shuttle commander. He will fly on the Space Shuttle Atlantis. International Space Station is capitalized, but shorter forms, Space Station or Station, are not. It's worth noting that this is only for the web documents, which use modified AP style; internal documents still frequently use GPO, which, as noted, tends more towards capitilization. Also, the web guidelines have changed back and forth multiple times just over the past few years. (Meaning anything in the SP-7084, published in 1998, would be too out of date to be official.) Also also, everything above applies only to NASA; others have other styles. So, in short — Is "shuttle" upper- or lowercased? Depends on who you ask, when you ask them, and what the context is. My advice — if this is for a particular outlet, see if they have a preference. If not, figure out what you think makes the most sense, and do that consistently. | |
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