English, asked by Raghav3333, 1 year ago

can anyone elaborate and explain :punctuations in abbrevations

Answers

Answered by pintukumarmandal
1
You can't punctuate in English without thinking about grammar. ... 'fussy' (one full stop for the abbreviation, one for the end of the sentence). .... I hope to develop this area more fully at a later date.
Answered by ravi34287
0
People are often uncertain about whether or not to use full stops/periods in abbreviations. Here are some guidelines:

1. In both American and British English, if you are using initial letters to represent words, you don’t normally need to put a full stop/period after:

NBC

2. In American English, however, it is common to use a full stop/period as an alternative style for certain abbreviations, in particular:

USA or U.S.A.

US or U.S.

3. If an abbreviation consists of the first and last letters of a word, the American rule is to include a full/stop period at the end:

Mr.

Dr.

St.

4. The British norm, however, is not to use a period at the end:

Mr

Dr

St

5. If the abbreviation consists only of the first part of a word, then you should put a period at the end:

Wed. (= Wednesday)

Dec. (= December)

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