What does tk mean in editing




















Looking up things in dictionary is my thing as well. Wow, what a creative way to just step over such obstacles. I like it. And it was a fun article to read. A different layout. Buy hey, TK the good work.

LOL… ;. How about you? Do you TK much? About Guest Blogger This post was written by a guest contributor. Please see their details in the post above. I need help to Karol, Super post! I never heard of TK before.

What tool do you use to create these fancy posts the lines and pointers etc. Just HTML prepared by hand. Awesome idea. Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best! This is me! Brilliant advice that I will incorporate immediately. This is getting too far. You mean tk it too far? I could barely get through this creative, eye-straining post design. But I love the idea. Sometimes the simplest ideas are the best.

Imaging post. TK is very advanced for us. Yes, we know TK is one of the best for us and i use it with my work.

TK Love the way you wrote this blog post. Jassie S. Text in all capital letters. AP style. Editing conventions recommended by "The Associated Press Stylebook and Briefing on Media Law" usually called the AP Stylebook , the primary style and usage guide for most newspapers and magazines.

APA style. Editing conventions recommended by the "Publication Manual of the American Psychological Association," the primary style guide used for academic writing in the social and behavioral sciences. Short for apostrophe. Illustration s maps, graphs, photographs, drawings in a text. Name of the character. The material at the end of a manuscript or book, which may include an appendix, endnotes, glossary, bibliography, and index.

Usually the first page of a book, which includes only the main title, not the subtitle or author's name. Also called false title. List of sources cited or consulted, usually part of the back matter. Quoted passage set off from the running text without quotation marks. Also called extract. Text that is reused without changes.

Short for boldface. Type that is framed in a border to give it prominence. Known as curly brackets in the UK. Name of the [ and ] characters. Also called square brackets. Circle or box on a hard copy in which an editor writes a comment. Dot used as a marker in a vertical list. May be round or square, closed or filled.

Vertical list also called a set-off list in which each item is introduced by a bullet. Note on hard copy to indicate the placement of art or to signal a cross-reference.

Short for capital letters. Title of an illustration; may also refer to all text that accompanies a piece of art. CBE style. An individual letter, number, or symbol. Chicago style. Editing conventions recommended by "The Chicago Manual of Style," the style guide used by some social science publications and most historical journals.

An entry directing the reader to other texts that serve as proof or support. Incorporating an author's responses to the copyediting into the final hard copy or computer file. An edit of a manuscript that checks for organization, continuity, and content.

A manuscript that is to be typeset. A sequence of lines of type that is treated as a single element in design or page makeup. To prepare a document for presentation in a printed form. The term copy edit is used to describe the kind of editing in which errors of style, usage, and punctuation are corrected.

In magazine and book publishing, the spelling copyedit is often used. A person who edits a manuscript. Calculating how much space a text will need when typeset, or how much copy will be needed to fill a space. Legal protection of an author's exclusive right to his or her work for a specified period of time. Changes made in a manuscript by the author or editor. An error, usually a printer's error, discovered too late to be corrected in a document and included in a separately printed list.

Also called addendum. A statement that identifies the source of an illustration. A phrase that mentions another part of the same document. Also called x-ref. Also called smart quotes. A manuscript that has been typeset and proofread. When we turn pro, we give up the comfortable life but we find our power. Steve answers the question, "How do we overcome Resistance? The order to picket and bypass means that you leave a small element to keep a watch on the enemy picket and then bypass them to continue with the main mission.

I once heard two types of writing: the Bricklaying and the Bulldozing. The first makes every paragraph perfect before moving on. I looked at my four half-finished books. I picked one and bulldozed it to the end, then did a chapter by chapter rewrite. I started Bricklaying the second half-finished book. I will now Bulldoxe it with TKs. More TKs to come, as I write the 2nd and probably the 3rd drafts. My important and essential point for today, TK, should come as no surprise to the pros around here.

Thank you. This post is most timely. This has left me stuck writing dialog and transition scenes that I might later cut. With placeholder notes that summarize the dialog or action, I can see the book as a collection of scenes and focus on the storytelling. Thanks for sharing, Steve! I could never have finished my first book without War of Art. Matt, your piece on storygrid.

Best short wisdom ever on how to pound the keys without driving yourself crazy. Good luck on all yet stuff, Big Kahuna! You know what I love? Recognized by the best of the best out there, and all of the rest of us, too! Velocity is everything! I love that. Tokum is a mis-spelling meaning 'to come', where more information is to come later.

If an editor has used TK, they are showing that more information is needed, or that more information will be coming for that particular section. The following link is a proof-reading site that provides British Standard markings. This site will provide you with additional details about proof-reading marks, in case you ever have another question about the marks an editor uses.

Nowhere in the table of symbols was TK listed as an editor's mark, though.



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