Across
- 5. Often the preferred term for a person from a Spanish-speaking land or culture from Latin America. Use more specific identification when possible.
- 7. Capitalize the names in all uses. When used with a specific date, abbreviate only. Spell out when using alone, or with a year.
- 10. Should be used in place of a person's given name in news stories only when it is the way the individual prefers to be known.
- 12. Lowecase the military vehicle and capitalize the brand.
- 13. Trademark for a brand of whirlpool products.
- 14. Capitalize legislative acts but not bills.
- 15. Do not use okay.
- 16. Use only with full names of persons or animals. Do not precede by a comma.
- 19. A trademark for a brand of facial tissue.
- 21. Capitalize before a name when it is the formal title for an individual who presides in a court of law. Do not continue to use the title in a second reference.
Down
- 1. ski Registered trademark for a type of personal watercraft.
- 2. Avoid use as a synonym for latest if it might imply finality.
- 3. Capitalize only when used before the name of royalty.
- 4. Use as the abbreviation for number in conjunction with a figure to indicate position or rank.
- 5. Capitalize when preceded by the name of a state. Lowercase when used generically and for all plural references.
- 6. Do not use before a date or day of the week when its absence would not lead to confusion, except at the beginning of a sentence.
- 7. Capitalize when referring to U.S. forces. Do not use the abbreviation USMC. Capitalize when referring to an individual. Do not describe as soldiers.
- 8. Do not precede this suffix by a hyphen unless the letter l would be tripled or the main element is a proper noun. Follow with a hyphen when used as a prefix meaning similar to.
- 9. Do not use as a synonym for woman. May be used when it is a courtesy title.
- 11. A trademark for photographic products made by Eastman Kodak Co.
- 12. Not interchangeable with prison.
- 17. Use when referring to spoken word.
- 18. In the sense of mass communication, such as magazines, newspapers, television, etc. The word is plural.
- 20. A generic term for all members of the bar. Do not use as a formal title.