enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Wikipedia : Manual of Style/Captions

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/...

    A caption may be a few words or several sentences. Writing good captions takes effort; along with the lead and section headings, captions are the most commonly read words in an article, so they should be succinct and informative. Not every image needs a caption; some are simply decorative. Relatively few may be genuinely self-explanatory.

  3. Subtitle (titling) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subtitle_(titling)

    In books and other works, the subtitle is an explanatory title added by the author to the title proper of a work. [1] Another kind of subtitle, often used in the past, is the alternative title, also called alternate title, traditionally denoted and added to the title with the alternative conjunction "or", hence its appellation.

  4. Wikipedia:Manual of Style - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_style

    Editors should structure articles with consistent, reader-friendly layouts and formatting (which are detailed in this guide). Where more than one style or format is acceptable under the MoS, one should be used consistently within an article and should not be changed without good reason. Edit warring over stylistic choices is unacceptable. [b]

  5. Wikipedia:Manual of Style/Titles of works - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Manual_of_Style/...

    An indefinite or definite article is capitalized only when at the start of a title, subtitle, or embedded title or subtitle. For example, a book chapter titled "An Examination of The Americans: The Anachronisms in FX's Period Spy Drama" contains three capitalized leading articles (main title "An", embedded title "The", and subtitle "The").

  6. Wikipedia:Writing better articles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Writing_better...

    Articles start with a lead section (WP:CREATELEAD) summarising the most important points of the topic.The lead section is the first part of the article; it comes above the first header, and may contain a lead image which is representative of the topic, and/or an infobox that provides a few key facts, often statistical, such as dates and measurements.

  7. Wikipedia:Article titles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:Article_titles

    Article titles are based on how reliable English-language sources refer to the article's subject. There is often more than one appropriate title for an article. In that case, editors choose the best title by consensus based on the considerations that this page explains. A good Wikipedia article title has the five following characteristics:

  8. Subtitles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subtitles

    The subtitle translator may also choose to display a note in the subtitles, usually in parentheses ("(" and ")"), or as a separate block of on-screen text—this allows the subtitle translator to preserve form and achieve an acceptable reading speed; that is, the subtitle translator may leave a note on the screen, even after the character has ...

  9. Help:How to write a readable article - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:How_to_write_a...

    The lead should instead give a good enough definition in the first sentence to be readable by everyone and then try to elaborate on it in the rest of the lead. It is best to explain the importance of a good lead section with an example. On 5 April 2021, the "Logic" article first two paragraphs looked like this: