From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AAM wording Information

Am I the only one who thinks that "author accepted manuscript" (sic!) is a bit of an awkward way to indicate a manuscript that has been accepted for publication? "Author's accepted manuscript" (see figure on https://camacuk.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/115005898287-What-is-the-author-accepted-manuscript-AAM-) sounds a bit better, but this wikipedia article uses "accepted author manuscript" which is equally awkward. Furthermore, it's sort of self-evident that it's the author's manuscript – whose else? – and "accepted manuscript" would do just fine in my opinion. Constructions like "author accepted manuscript" [1] or "accepted author manuscript" always makes me think that someone forgot to include a hyphen [2], which would give the two phrases a rather interesting turn. The figure used in this wikipedia article uses a hyphen, by the way. Is there any reason to specifically mention that an author is involved with the manuscript?

Regards, Matthias ( 128.179.253.45 ( talk) 15:04, 2 October 2020 (UTC)) reply

  1. ^ "accepted" as participle, not in the past tense as in "man bit dog"
  2. ^ "Punctuate that sentence!"
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

AAM wording Information

Am I the only one who thinks that "author accepted manuscript" (sic!) is a bit of an awkward way to indicate a manuscript that has been accepted for publication? "Author's accepted manuscript" (see figure on https://camacuk.zendesk.com/hc/en-us/articles/115005898287-What-is-the-author-accepted-manuscript-AAM-) sounds a bit better, but this wikipedia article uses "accepted author manuscript" which is equally awkward. Furthermore, it's sort of self-evident that it's the author's manuscript – whose else? – and "accepted manuscript" would do just fine in my opinion. Constructions like "author accepted manuscript" [1] or "accepted author manuscript" always makes me think that someone forgot to include a hyphen [2], which would give the two phrases a rather interesting turn. The figure used in this wikipedia article uses a hyphen, by the way. Is there any reason to specifically mention that an author is involved with the manuscript?

Regards, Matthias ( 128.179.253.45 ( talk) 15:04, 2 October 2020 (UTC)) reply

  1. ^ "accepted" as participle, not in the past tense as in "man bit dog"
  2. ^ "Punctuate that sentence!"

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