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Online style guide

cabinet

federal cabinet, shadow cabinet

caddie

golf caddie

caddy

tea caddy

caesarean
calendar
callous

unfeeling

callus

hard skin

cancan

the dance

canon

body of work (cannon is the weapon)

canvas, canvases

artists' material

canvass, canvassed, canvassing

solicit votes, opinion etc

Cape Canaveral
Cape Town

one of the host cities of the 2010 FIFA World Cup, and the legislative capital of South Africa

capitalisation

We tend towards minimal capitalisation, using newspaper style headings and limiting initial capitals (apart from the beginning of sentences) to proper nouns—that is, nouns describing a particular person or thing.

cappuccino
career

when used as a verb means to rush headlong (careen is to keel over)

Caribbean
carte blanche
cast off

the boat cast off from the quay

cast-off

we accept cast-off clothing

catapult

not catapault

catch-22
Catholic

Roman Catholic (but small c for catholic tastes)

caviar
CDs plural

no apostrophe

cemetery

not cemetary

censor, censure

you voice your censure when you're censoring something

Central Australia

capitalised, but northern Australia not, as 'northern' is descriptive, not an official name

centre or epicentre

A listener has recommended that we avoid using epicentre to describe anything other than the point on the earth's surface directly above the central disturbance of an earthquake.

century

twentieth century, 21st century, the nineteen hundreds, the 80s

chafing at the bit

not chaffing

chairman of the ABC board

no need to capitalise. Same for general manager, chief executive, etc

Champs Elysees
chancellor, vice-chancellor

no need to capitalise

changeable
chapter headings

when cited appear in single quotes

chatroom, chatshow
chauffeur, chauffeured
cheap

as chips

Chechen, Chechnya

Chechen Republic, Chechen people, Chechen prime minister, Republic of Chechnya.

cheep

the birdsong

Chennai
childcare

The Macquarie dictionary lists child care for 'the professional superintendence of children', followed by child-care centre and childcare worker. We prefer the one-word version for all uses.

choirboy
cholesterol
Chomsky, Noam
chord

musical chord, but spinal or vocal cord

Christian, Christianity

but unchristian, and a child's christening

circuit, circuitry
civilisation

not civilization

cliches

George Orwell said, 'Never use a metaphor, simile or other figure of speech which you are used to seeing in print.' So in that spirit, please avoid phrases like these:

battle with cancer
raft of awards
at the end of the day

co-op, co-opt,

(but cooperation, cooperative)

Coca-Cola, Coke

trademark so capitalise

cocoon
coexist, coexistence

no hyphen

cold-blooded
coliseum

large stadium or theatre (but Colosseum is the amphitheatre in Rome)

collective nouns

committee, jury, choir, audience: the audience were (plural) drifting in to the auditorium in ones and twos; the entire audience was (singular) on its feet. Use of singular or plural verb depends on how you want the collective noun to be understood.

Colombia

is the South American country. Columbia is a city in the US state of South Carolina.

colon
Colosseum

the Roman amphitheatre. Coliseum for buildings in other countries.

commas

On the RN website all punctuation should make sense grammatically, not just rhetorically. Marks you use to show pauses and intonation in your studio scripts won't necessarily work in online copy. For some comma rules follow the 'how to use commas' link below

Commonwealth
compare

compare like with like: yesterday's weather with today's. But compare two different things with the aim of finding similarities: compare her outfit to an unmade bed.

complement (noun)

the full complement

complement (verb)

you might complement that outfit by adding a scarf

complementary (adjective)

might describe angles, colours, medicine; and means completing a whole

compliment (noun)

you pay someone a compliment

compliment (verb)

I compliment you on your great dress sense

complimentary (adjective)

I was being complimentary when I said you had great dress sense. Free drinks or tickets are also complimentary.

comprehensible

understandable

comprehensive

inclusive

comprise

means consist of. So comprise of is wrong

Condoleezza Rice
consensus

means general agreement or concord, or majority of opinion (Macquarie) so 'opinion' is redundant in 'consensus of opinion'

consequences for

we usually say something may have serious consequences for an existing situation. So the following doesn't sound right: '...the increasing numbers of jellyfish around the world are having serious consequences on the marine life status quo...' The writer may have been thinking of 'effect on'.

continual, continuous

continual means continuing on with stops and starts; continuous means going on without stopping.

convener

not convenor

cooperation
cooperative
coordinator

(no hyphen)

Cootamundra
copyright notice

Please use this wording: For copyright reasons this [program, story, interview, etc] is not available as [streaming, downloadable audio etc] ...

cord

thin rope, vocal or spinal cord, but musical chord

correspondent

writer or reporter, but co-respondent in a divorce case

court martial, courts martial

the verb is to court-martial

couscous
cowed

intimidated (but to kowtow, from the Chinese, means to prostrate yourself before someone)

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD)
cringe, cringing
criteria (plural), criterion (singular)

and it's phenomena (plural) but phenomenon (singular)

Cross-benchers

not cross benchers

crossroads
cuckoo
cum

kitchen-cum-dining room

curb

to restrain (kerb is the edge of the footpath)

curly quotes

Microsoft Word has a feature that changes straight quotes and apostrophes into curly quotes. Invariably these display as something like this: ’ when published online. Here's how to turn them off in Word:

currant

dried fruit

current

electricity or water

currently

use 'now'

cusp

means where two points meet. It doesn't mean on the verge of. Your birthday can be on the cusp of two star signs, but you can't be on the cusp of adulthood.

cut a swath
cut and paste

useful keyboard shortcuts in MS Word: Ctrl+A highlights all text, Ctrl+C copies it, and Ctrl+V pastes it to a new place or a new document. On a Mac 'Ctrl' is the Apple key.

cyclone

cyclone Tracy, tropical cyclone Aivu, hurricane Andrew