15 APA Notes: Footnotes in The Text
15 APA Notes: Footnotes in The Text
15 APA Notes: Footnotes in The Text
TABLE NOTE
Note. The data on sibutramine are adapted from “Behavior Therapy and Sibutramine for
the Treatment of Adolescent Obesity,” by R. I. Berkowitz, T. A. Wadden, A. M.
Tershakovec, & J. L. Cronquist, 2003, Journal of the American Medical Association,
289, pp. 1807–1809. The data on orlistat are adapted from Xenical (Orlistat) Capsules:
Complete Product Information, by Roche Laboratories, December 2003, retrieved from
http://www.rocheusa.com/products/xenical/pi.pdf
a
The medication and/or placebo were combined with behavioral therapy in all groups
over all time periods.
Notes in figures Each figure should have a number and a caption, a brief explanation of
the content of the figure, at the bottom of the figure. If you have taken or adapted the
figure from an outside source, give the source information immediately following the
caption. (See also “Visuals” in 11a.)
FIGURE NOTE
Figure 1. As countries engage in a currency war, the exchange rates against the dollar
can fluctuate widely. Adapted from “Currencies Against the Dollar,” September 30,
2011, The Economist, retrieved from
http://www.economist.com/blogs/dailychart/2011/09/emerging-market-currencies
16 Tighten wordy sentences.
Long sentences are not necessarily wordy, nor are short sentences always concise. A
sentence is wordy if it can be tightened without loss of meaning.
16a Redundancies
Redundancies such as cooperate together, yellow in color, and basic essentials are a
common source of wordiness. There is no need to say the same thing twice.
Modifiers are redundant when their meanings are suggested by other words in the
sentence.
by means of
in order to
in spite of the fact that
CONCISE
like
now,currently
because
by
because
because
to
although, though
if
until
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As a rule, active verbs express meaning more vigorously than their weaker counterparts
—forms of the verb be or verbs in the passive voice. Forms of be (be, am, is, are, was,
were, being, been) lack vigor because they convey no action. Passive verbs lack strength
because their subjects receive the action instead of doing it.
Forms of be and passive verbs have legitimate uses, but choose an active verb
whenever possible.
BE VERB A surge of power was responsible for the destruction of the pumps.
NOTE: When used as helping verbs with present participles to express ongoing action,
be verbs are fine: She was swimming when the whistle blew. (See 26b.)
In passive sentences, the actor (in this case, committee) frequently does not appear: A
decision was reached.
Usually, you will want to emphasize the actor, so you should use the active voice.
To replace a passive verb with an active one, make the actor the subject of the sentence.
The passive voice is appropriate when you wish to emphasize the receiver of the
action or to minimize the
importance of the actor. In the following sentence, for example, the writer wished to
focus on the tobacco plants, not on the people spraying them: As the time for harvest
approaches, the tobacco plants are sprayed with a chemical to retard the growth of
suckers. (See also 2b.)
18 Balance parallel ideas.
If two or more ideas are parallel, they should be expressed in parallel grammatical form.
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a pair of correlative conjunctions such as either . . . or, neither . . . nor, not only . . . but
also, or whether . . . or; or (3) with a word introducing a comparison, usually than or as.
The coordinating conjunction and connects two -ing verb forms: reducing . . .
extending.
The correlative conjunction not only . . . but also connects two noun phrases: a
prolific inventor and a successful entrepreneur.
The comparative term than links two infinitive phrases: to speak . . . to ground.
NOTE: Repeat function words such as prepositions (by, to) and subordinating
conjunctions (that, because) to make parallel ideas easier to grasp.
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Milgram didn’t discover people; he discovered that people were willing to inflict pain
on strangers.
COMPLETE The mice have less energy than the rats that were fed the same food.
Also, comparisons should leave no ambiguity about meaning. In the following sentence,
two interpretations are possible.
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A mixed construction contains sentence parts that do not sensibly fit together. The
mismatch may be a matter of grammar or of logic.
The prepositional phrase beginning with For cannot serve as the subject of the verb
increase. The revision makes drivers the subject.
The coordinating conjunction but cannot link a subordinate clause (Although . . .) with
an independent clause (more than 20% . . .).
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When the limiting modifier not is misplaced, the sentence usually suggests a
meaning that the writer did not intend.
The original sentence means that no black southerners were slaves. The revision
makes the writer’s real meaning clear.
The framers (not the Constitution itself ) wanted to create checks and balances.
The women (not their access to the priesthood) completed the training. The writer has
revised the sentence by making women (not women’s access) the subject.
When a rough draft is filled with too many samesounding sentences, try to inject some
variety—as long as you can do so without sacrificing clarity or ease of reading.
Also look for opportunities to tuck some of your ideas into phrases, word groups
without subjects or verbs (or both). You will usually see more than one way to combine
choppy sentences; the method you choose should depend on the details you want to
emphasize.
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The revision on the bottom of page 150 emphasizes the significance of the canal
during the Civil War. The first sentence, about the age of the canal, has been made into
a phrase modifying Chesapeake and Ohio Canal.
This revision emphasizes the age of the canal. The second sentence, about its use for
transportation of goods, has become a participial phrase modifying Chesapeake and
Ohio Canal.
When short sentences contain ideas of equal importance, it is often effective to
combine them with and, but, or or.
23b Varying sentence openings
Most sentences in English begin with the subject, move to the verb, and continue to an
object, with modifiers tucked in along the way or put at the end. For the most part, such
sentences are fine. Put too many of them in a row, however, and they become
monotonous.
Words, phrases, or clauses modifying the verb can often be inserted ahead of the
subject.
Participial phrases (beginning with verb forms such as driving or exhausted) can
frequently be moved to the start of a sentence without loss of clarity.
NOTE:In a sentence that begins with a participial phrase, the subject of the sentence must
name the person or thing being described. If it doesn’t, the phrase dangles. (See 22c.)
24 Find an appropriate voice.
An appropriate voice is one that suits your subject, engages your audience, and
conforms to the conventions of the genre in which you are writing, such as analytical
essays, lab reports, research papers, business memos, and so on. (See also 2b and 2c.)
In writing in the social sciences and related fields, certain language is generally
considered inappropriate: jargon, clichés, slang, and sexist language.
24a Jargon
Jargon is specialized language used among members of a trade, profession, or group.
Use jargon only when readers will be familiar with it; even then, use it only when plain
English will not do as well.
JARGON We outsourced the work to an outfit in Ohio because we didn’t have the
bandwidth to tackle it in-house.
REVISED We hired a company in Ohio because we had too few employees to do the
work.
components (parts)
endeavor (try)
facilitate (help)
finalize (finish)
indicator (sign)
optimal (best)
prior to (before)
utilize (use)
viable (workable)
Sentences filled with jargon are hard to read and often wordy.
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24b Clichés
The pioneer who first announced that he had “slept like a log” no doubt amused his
companions with a fresh and unlikely comparison. Today, however, that comparison is
a cliché, a saying that can no longer add emphasis or surprise. To see just how
predictable clichés are, put your hand over the right-hand column below and then finish
the phrases given on the left.
cool as a
crystal
light as a
like a bull
playing with
nutty as a
selling like
white as a
cucumber
bush
bee, beaver
clear
feather
in a china shop
fire
fruitcake
hotcakes
bridge
sheet, ghost
plague
The solution for clichés is simple: Just delete them. Sometimes you can write
around a cliché by adding an element of surprise. One student who had written that she
had butterflies in her stomach revised her cliché like this:
If all of the action in my stomach is caused by butterflies, there must be a horde of
them, with horseshoes on.
The image of butterflies wearing horseshoes is fresh and unlikely, not predictable
like the original cliché.
24c Slang
Slang is an informal and sometimes private vocabulary that expresses the solidarity of a
group such as teenagers, rap musicians, or sports fans. Although it does have a certain
vitality, slang is a code that not everyone understands, and it is too informal for most
written work.
Traditionally, he, him, and his were used to refer generically to persons of either
sex: A journalist is motivated by his deadline. You can avoid such sexist usage in one of
three ways: substitute a pair of pronouns (he or she, his or her); reword in the plural; or
revise the sentence to avoid the problem. Note that the terms he or she and his or her
are inclusive but wordy; fine in small doses, they can become awkward when repeated
throughout a paper. The other two strategies are usually more effective.
Like he and his, the nouns man and men and related words were once used
generically to refer to persons of either sex. Use gender-neutral terms instead.
INAPPROPRIATE
chairman
congressman
fireman
mailman
mankind
to man
weatherman
APPROPRIATE
chairperson, chair
representative, legislator
firefighter
people, humans
to operate, to staff
meteorologist, forecaster
In the present tense, verbs agree with their subjects in number (singular or plural) and in
person (first, second, or third). The present-tense ending -s is used on a verb if its
subject is thirdperson singular; otherwise the verb takes no ending. Consider, for
example, the present-tense forms of the verb give.
SINGULAR PLURAL
FIRST PERSON I give we give
SECOND PERSON you give you give
THIRD PERSON he/she/it gives they give
Yolanda gives parents give
The verb be varies from this pattern; it has special forms in both the present and
the past tense.
PRESENT-TENSE FORMS OF BE
I am
you are
he/she/it is
we are
you are
they are
PAST-TENSE FORMS OF BE
I was
you were
he/she/it was
we were
you were
they were
This section describes particular situations that can cause problems with subject-
verb agreement.
25a Words between subject and verb
Word groups often come between the subject and the verb. Such word groups, usually
modifying the subject, may contain a noun that at first appears to be the subject. By
mentally stripping away such modifiers, you can isolate the noun that is in fact the
subject.
NOTE: Phrases beginning with the prepositions as well as, in addition to, accompanied
by, together with, and along with do not make a singular subject plural: The governor as
well as his aide was [not were] on the plane.
A few indefinite pronouns (all, any, none, some) may be singular or plural
depending on the noun or pronoun they refer to: Some of our luggage was lost. Some of
the rocks were slippery. None of his advice makes sense. None of the eggs were broken.
NOTE: In general, when fractions or units of measurement are used with a singular noun,
treat them as singular; when they are used with a plural noun, treat them as plural:
Three-fourths of the pie has been eaten. One-fourth of the drivers were texting.
The subject, turtle and snake, is plural, so the verb must be were.
The antecedent of that is things, not one. Several things set us apart from animals.
When the phrase the only comes before one, you are safe in assuming that one is
the antecedent of the relative pronoun.
The antecedent of who is one, not friends. Only one friend lives in the building.