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The Economist Style Guide Hardcover – 12 Jun. 2003
- Print length180 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherEconomist Books
- Publication date12 Jun. 2003
- Dimensions14.4 x 1.9 x 22.3 cm
- ISBN-10186197535X
- ISBN-13978-1861975355
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Product details
- Publisher : Economist Books; 8th edition (12 Jun. 2003)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 180 pages
- ISBN-10 : 186197535X
- ISBN-13 : 978-1861975355
- Dimensions : 14.4 x 1.9 x 22.3 cm
- Best Sellers Rank: 1,235,419 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- 1,457 in Handwriting Reference
- 2,910 in Grammar, Structure & Syntax
- 11,542 in English as a Foreign Language
- Customer reviews:
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The later version has more reference material than the first but I was a tad disappointed by the lower quality paper used in this version.
That said, this is a great book for anyone who has to write reports or essays and clarifies many grammatical problems, something to which I am emminently prone.
You will also find this to be a valuable general reference book!
For example, it discourages the use of commas in sentences that contain a series of items (a practice that introduces ambiguity into such sentences).
It exhorts
"Do not put a comma before and at the end of a sequence of items unless one of the items includes another and. Thus The doctor suggested an aspirin, half a grapefruit and a cup of broth. But he ordered scrambled eggs, whisky and soda, and a selection from the trolley."
This practice introduces ambiguity as to whether the last two items of a series are actually a group item (as is normally indicated by the conjunction "and") or to whether they are two independent items in the series. Punctuation is meant to reduce ambiguity; this practice espoused by the Economist serves to increase ambiguity.
In short, it panders to language laziness and cultural conventions even when those conventions degrade linguistic precision. This lessens its worth as a style guide.





