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Punctuating Acronyms and Initialisms

November 20, 2017 by gomarketing

Because acronyms are read and function as regular words, they are rarely preceded by an article—a, an, or the—in a sentence. However, when they are preceded by an article, choosing a, an, or the depends on how the sentence would sound when read aloud. For example:

“When NATO asked NASA to form a committee, a WHO director became chairperson.”

Because initialisms are read as a string of letters, they often take a, an, or the. For example:

“An MIT graduate was required to take a writing test at the FDA office.”

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