Library of Formatting Examples:Italics/03A: Difference between revisions

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{{LOFE:Navbar|prev=Italics/02C|next=Italics/04A|cat=Italics}}
{{LOFE:Navbar|prev=Italics/02C|next=Italics/04A|cat=Italics}}
<div class="lofe-examples">
{{LOFE:Example start |image-filename=101-03A.png|iw=40|tw=40|}}
{{LOFE:Example start |image-filename=101-03A.png|image-max=lofe-x50|text-min=lofe-m40|text-max=lofe-x50|}}
{{LOFE:Tag|i}}Opposition to the Constitution.{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}--As soon as the text of
    {{LOFE:Tag|i}}Opposition to the Constitution.{{LOFE:Tag|/i}}--As soon as the text of
the Constitution was made known to the people of the
    the Constitution was made known to the people of the
{{LOFE:Example middle}}
{{LOFE:Example middle}}
== Complete sentences ==
== Complete sentences ==
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The em-dash is a separator. It is not part of either sentence and it goes '''outside''' the markups.
The em-dash is a separator. It is not part of either sentence and it goes '''outside''' the markups.
{{LOFE:Example end}}
{{LOFE:Example end}}
</div>

Latest revision as of 11:35, 27 December 2025

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Page image

101-03A.png

Correctly formatted text

<i>Opposition to the Constitution.</i>--As soon as the text of
the Constitution was made known to the people of the

Complete sentences

These examples use the term "complete sentence" to identify self-contained phrases as well as what we normally think of as "sentences." So, above we have a "complete sentence" and its period goes inside.

Em-dashes

The em-dash is a separator. It is not part of either sentence and it goes outside the markups.