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期刊名称:NAMES-A JOURNAL OF ONOMASTICS

ISSN:0027-7738
出版频率:Quarterly
出版社:UNIV PITTSBURGH, UNIV LIBRARY SYSTEM, 3960 FORBES AVE, PITTSBURGH, USA, PA, 15260
  出版社网址:http://www.maneyonline.com/
期刊网址:http://maneypublishing.com/index.php/journals/nam/
主题范畴:LANGUAGE & LINGUISTICS
变更情况:New added in 2012

期刊简介(About the journal)    投稿须知(Instructions to Authors)    编辑部信息(Editorial Board)   



About the journal

 

Names: A Journal of Onomastics

Journal of the American Name Society

Volume 62 (2014), 4 issues per year

Print ISSN: 0027-7738
Online ISSN: 1756-2279
 
 

Instructions to Authors

Instructions for Authors

Names welcomes original papers that match the aims and scope of the Journal on the understanding that the paper has not previously been published, and is not being concurrently submitted for publication elsewhere. All papers will be sent to independent referees. It is a condition of publication that on acceptance of the paper by the Journal Editors that copyright must be assigned to The American Name Society.

 

General  

Articles are published in English. They should be submitted in the first instance to the Editor: Frank Nuessel, University of Louisville, USA (email: fhnues01@louisville.edu). The author's name and address should be given on a separate page and should not appear on the article. An abstract and seven key words should be included on a separate page (see below). Please use double spacing and the same font size (at least 12 point) throughout, including endnotes, and leave ample margins (at least 2.5 cm). When an article is accepted for publication, we require, in the interests of economy and accuracy, both a disk containing PC compatible Word files and two copies of the definitive typescript incorporating any revisions. Typescripts should be prepared in accordance with The Chicago Manual of Style.  

For information about style and formatting of articles and file type requirements please click here.

 

Authors, or their funding agency, may sponsor an article for open access publication. For information on article charges and how to exercise this option visit www.maney.co.uk/moreopenchoice. These notes are intended only to provide an overview. Address enquiries to the Journal editor.

 

Supplementary material

Additional material (e.g. datasets, models, animations or videos) that enhances the content and impact of articles. Supplementary material is intended to support arguments advanced in the article; it must not refer to other work nor contain discussion or conclusions that go beyond the content of the article. The inclusion of supplementary material is at the discretion of the Editor whose decision on its relevance and appropriateness is final. Supplementary material should be referred to in the main text, but must be self-contained and supplied as separate files. Refer to each item of supplementary material in parentheses within the text: (Supplementary Material 1), (Supplementary Material 2) and so forth. See the detailed instructions here on submission and presentation of supplementary material.

Abstracts
Authors should supply an abstract with their article of between 100-150 words summarizing the contents of their paper and including seven keywords. The final version of this will be made available online. It is therefore important that the abstract should be succinct but sufficiently comprehensive to 'stand alone' as a summary of the paper. 

 

Endnotes 

Endnote numbers should be given in the text, immediately following the most convenient punctuation mark. They should be kept to the strict minimum necessary for documentation and should not contain extra expository material.    

References 
Normally the names of books, journals, or articles should not appear in the text. Documentation by author and date of publication should appear in reasonable proximity to the quotation or paraphrase it documents. Notes should be reserved for additional examples, explanations, elaborations, or qualifications of points made in the text. Notes, of course, may contain their own documentation.  

Internal (Parenthetical) Documentation 

  1. Identify all references in parentheses by author and year of publication. Separate multiple references within semi-colons:  

        (Harder 1989). Or: (Miller 1987; Ashley 1989b). 

  1. For direct quotations and when otherwise relevant, include page number(s) in addition to author and year of publication:  

        (Rennick 1991, 3-4). Or: (Murray 1993a, 34; Nuessel 1990, 12, 21-32,         330-31) 

  1. If the author's name is included as part of the text, do not repeat it in the citation:   

        Nicolaisen (1993b) has noted the value of placenames in the study of language change.  

Normally the reference section should contain full details of works mentions should be given, and contributors should adhere to journal style in presentation of references, as in these examples:  

 

For books: 

Allen, Irving Lewis. 1983a. The Language of Ethnic Conflict: Social Organisiation and Lexical Culture. New York: Columbia University Press.  

 

For articles in books: 

Grimaud, M. 1988. “Discourse Anaphora and the Functioning of Proper Names in Narrative.” Psychological Approaches to the Study of Literary Narrative. Ed. Colin Martindale. Hamburg: Buske, 96-132.   

 

For articles in journals: 

Barry, Herbert, III, and Aylene S. Harper. 1993. “Feminization of Unisex Names from 1960 to 1990.” Names 41:228-238. 

 

For the second reference to an author: 

______. 1983b. “Personal Names That Became Ethnic Epithets.” Names 31: 307-17.  

  

Points to note include: 

        capitalize principal words, after the first, in book and article titles; use a colon to separate title and subtitle; italicize titles of books and journals, but not titles of articles within books and in journals  

  • the name of the editor follows the book   
  • if the article is in English, give foreign places of publication in the English form if there is one (Florence, Geneva etc.)   
  • abbreviations include '2nd edn', 'rev. edn', 'ed. By', 'trans. By', 'rev. by', 'repr.'  
  • give the last two numbers when expressing inclusive numbers within the same hundred, as in 20-21, 129-34, 205-06 (note especially the repetition of zero in the last case)   
  • insert a space after an initial and full point (R. L. not R.L.) and after vol., no., etc.   
  • reference to a page or pages within a series of pages is given, using just the arabic numerals.; however, full forms such as 'page', 'line' are used within the text   
  • volume numbers of books are given in roman small capitals (it is rarely necessary to use 'vol.'), but those of journals are given in Arabic numerals; no comma is used before parentheses;   
  • use 'and others' not 'et al.'; in articles in English, avoid the Italian abbreviation 'AA. VV.': instead, give the name of the first author followed by 'and others'.   

Numbers of acts of plays and other major subdivisions should be given in roman numerals.  

References to the Bible should be in the form: Isaiah 22. 17; II Corinthians 5. 13-15. 'Folio', 'recto', and 'verso' are abbreviated thus: fol. 3r, fol. 127v, fols 17v-22r, with superscript r and v.  

Quotations
Long quotations (more than about fifty words of prose, or more than two complete lines of verse) should begin on a new line, indented and single spaced. Do not use quotation marks at the beginning and end unless they are in the original, and do not indent prose. Long quotations usually end with a full point; there is no need to preserve the original punctuation at the end, unless this is a question mark or exclamation mark. The reference should be placed in parentheses at the end of the quotation, after any punctuation mark. 

Short quotations (prose and verse) should be placed within double quotation marks and run on with the body of the text. Do not use italics unless they are in the original or are added for emphasis. Use the vertical line | and not the oblique / in order to separate lines of verse. References should be placed in parentheses at the end of the quotations, after the final inverted comma but before any punctuation mark. If a short quotation is used within a sentence, the final full point should be outside the closing quotation mark. Question marks and exclamation marks at the end of a quotation should be inside the closing quotation mark, which should itself be followed by the punctuation mark ending the sentence; e.g. 
He asks the question 'chi era costui?'. 
The final full point should precede the closing quotation mark only when the quotation forms a complete sentence and is separated from the preceding passage by a punctuation mark.  

For a quotation within a quotation, use single inverted commas, and normalize foreign usage (« » etc.) to English “ ”.  

Indicate an omission with an ellipsis in square brackets, […], but do not indicate omissions at the end of quotations or at the start of prose quotations. Indicate omissions at the start of verse quotations only if the quotation does not begin at the start of the line and is longer than one line. Omitted lines of verse should be indicated by an ellipsis at the end of the preceding line (not by a row of dots). Square brackets should also be used for interpolations within quotations.  

  

Spelling and dates
Use American spelling rather than British.

  

Punctuation
Enumerations of more than two items should have a comma after all but the last item, e.g. 'Paris, Calais, and Toulouse'. There should be no punctuation (other than question marks and full points used to mark abbreviations) after sub-headings and items in lists. 

Do not use a full point after contractions which end with the same letter as the full form (thus vols, nos, Mr, St, edn, but vol., pp., ed., e.g., etc.), or in mm, cm; but use in. for inches to avoid confusion.  

Do not use punctuation in common abbreviations such as BBC, NATO, USA, PCI.  

Use parentheses (not square brackets) within parentheses.  

  

Acknowledgements
Any acknowledgements should be placed at the end of the article, before any Notes and before the Bibliography.  

  

Submission of articles and reviews on disk
Articles should be submitted in PC format in Word where possible. Use one size of one simple typeface, such as Times Roman, and avoid justified type. 

Use smart (curly) quotes for single and double quotation marks as appropriate.  

An EN rule is used to indicate a span or a differentiation (pp. 1-5, the Milan-Florence conflict); an EM rule (-) is used to enclose parenthetical statements or to denote a break in a sentence. If you are confident that you know which is appropriate, please use these dashes when preparing your typescript. Use the standard dash on your keyboard for a hyphen.  

Please do not use hard page breaks, or hyphens to split words at line endings.  

  

Tables
Tables should be submitted on separate sheets, numbered in arabic numerals, and their position indicated in the text (e.g. Table 1). Each table should have a short self-explanatory title. Vertical rules must not be used to separate columns. Any explanatory notes, including the source, should be given in a note at the bottom of the table. It is the author's responsibility to obtain written permission to quote or reproduce material which has appeared in another publication.

  

Copyright and Ethics
It is the responsibility of the author to ensure that they comply with Maney’s copyright and ethics (including plagiarism) policies. Strong policies in these areas protect the rights of authors, editors, reviewers and publishers alike ensuring the reputation of the publication and copyright holders.

Maney’s policies can be found by reading the information available here, along with best practice guidelines for authors, journal editors and reviewers.

 


Editorial Board



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