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  2. The United States. U.S. ("you ess") U.S. of A. Based on the above, saying "the USA" (starting out lowercase) is appropriate, because it is a shortcut referring to the informal name of "United States of America", while "The USA" (starting out uppercase) is also appropriate, because it is a shortcut referring to the full authentic name.

  3. What's the proper style to write a company's name followed by...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/15898/whats-the-proper-style-to-write-a...

    Facebook, Inc. Google Inc. Twitter, Inc. Apple Inc. This is what I read on Wikipedia about Facebook, Google, Twitter and Apple. Note that the first and third has comma before Inc.. The second and

  4. What does "Re:" in a business letter mean? - English Language...

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/13290/what-does-re-in-a-business-letter-mean

    2. RE: Stands for regarding to/or Referring to when used in a business letter (equivalent to Subject line in emails). Was often used in business letters before emails were popular, hence the confusion. Used as a subject first line of the letter and not in the main text. Example, right before or after salutation:

  5. Since the abbreviations you mention all come from Latin, I'll mention a few guidelines for those. In general, if the abbreviation is two letters separated by a period, the individual letters are pronounced: i.e. is pronounced eye - yee. e.g. is pronounced yee - gee. These are formally known as initialisms, but that is of little help, since what ...

  6. abbreviations - English Language Learners Stack Exchange

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/225515

    At this point you are extending and developing the Language by creating new words which are understood initially by the context. In time, you and your friends might come to use "doc" as the abbrieviation for documentary. But as a learner you don't need to do this. You should normally stick to the full word. Share.

  7. People sometimes give me phone number like (XXX) XXX XXXX ext. XXX. I was wondering what does this 'ext. XXX' mean?

  8. 5. Practice varies from publisher to publisher, but these are common abbreviations: K for thousands of dollars, Euros, etc. is a relatively recent adoption from computing and is not yet much used in formal contexts. The usual abbreviations for million and billion are M (or m) and B (or b); you may also encounter Mn (mn) and Bn (bn ...

  9. What does 'K' mean in '20K' when talking about prices?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/39370

    The SI prefix for a thousand is kilo-, officially abbreviated as k—for instance, prefixed to "metre" or its abbreviation m, kilometre or km signifies a thousand metres. As such, people occasionally represent the number in a non-standard notation by replacing the last three zeros of the general numeral with "k": for instance, 30k for 30,000.

  10. What do the abbreviations "Ms." and "Mrs" stand for?

    ell.stackexchange.com/questions/231183/what-do-the-abbreviations-ms-and-mrs...

    Mrs. was once an abbreviation for "Mistress," a title used for a married woman of relatively high social status. The title for an unmarried woman of the same social stratum was "Miss." As society became more democratic in its linguistic usages, the titles lost any sense of social status other than marital. In the late 20th century, a woman's ...

  11. It may be that those who coined "b/w" to mean "between" confused it with "w/o" (meaning "without") and assumed any word can be shortened with a slash. However, "without" at least suggests two separate words ("with out") while "between" does not. The point is that "b/w" does not fit standard shorthand conventions, so there is no reason why ...