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Below is a list of the most common customer questions. If you can’t find an answer to your question, please don’t hesitate to reach out to us.
When used in a sentence, professional titles should be uppercase before a person's name and lowercase after. (When a title appears before a person's name, it is seen as part of the name. When it appears after or on its own, it is seen as the name of the job and not the person, so it should not be capitalized.)
In a formal first reference to a faculty or staff member, use the person's formal first name and last name followed by degree (if applicable) and lowercase job title. If the individual routinely uses his or her middle name, include it.
Commas should sometimes be placed before and after names and titles. It all depends on the context. Let's start with the fact that unless a name or title is the last word(s) in a sentence, it can either be used with no commas at all, OR with a comma both before and after.
Between a person's title and name (when the title comes first). When you write someone's title before the person's name, you don't need to use a comma in between: Do note, though, that when the title follows the name, it is set off by commas.
Post-nominal letters, also called post-nominal initials, post-nominal titles or designator letters, are letters placed after a person's name to indicate that the individual holds a position, academic degree, accreditation, office, military decoration, or honor, or is a member of a religious institute or fraternity.
If you have a name with a title (like a job title: Frank Jones, CEO), then the name will be separated from the job title by a comma. But if you have a list of names and titles, the name-title combinations are separated by semi-colons.
In a formal first reference to a faculty or staff member, use the person's formal first name and last name followed by degree (if applicable) and lowercase job title. If the individual routinely uses his or her middle name, include it.
In general, you should italicize the titles of long works, like books, movies, or record albums. Use quotation marks for the titles of shorter pieces of work: poems, articles, book chapters, songs, T.V. episodes, etc.
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