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Follow the guidelines below when using Latin terms and abbreviations.
Latin terms or phrases may be printed either in roman or in italic type, depending on the degree to which the term has been assimilated into English:
If you are unsure whether to italicize a specific term, the easiest solution is to check the Canadian Oxford Dictionary; if the term is normally italicized, it will be italicized in the dictionary entry.
The following Latin reference terms are always italicized:
In non-legal writing, the abbreviations for Latin expressions are generally printed in roman type, even when the full term is italicized. Here are some of the most common examples:
When a Latin abbreviation consists of two abbreviated terms, a period follows each abbreviated term: for example, e.g., i.e., loc. cit., op. cit., q.v. (Note that there is no space after the first period in the abbreviations e.g., i.e. and q.v.)
The following Latin terms are not abbreviations and are never followed by a period unless they are placed at the end of a sentence:
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