The Chicago Manual of Style: Difference between revisions

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The 17th edition was published in September 2017. It offers new and expanded style guidelines in response to advancing technology and social change. It also includes new and revised content reflecting the latest publishing practices and electronic workflows and self-publishing. Citation recommendations, the glossary of problematic words and phrases, and the bibliography have all been updated and expanded. In the 17th edition, email lost its hyphen, internet became lowercase, the singular "they" and "their" are now acceptable in certain circumstances, a major new section on syntax has been added, and the long-standing recommendation to use "ibid" has changed due to electronic publishing.
 
The 18th edition was the first to recommend omitting publication locations from citations. It added citation styles for A.I. generated text and images, increased the scope of usage of singular and non-binary "they," and abandoned its efforts (since 1969) of writing "Roman" in "Roman numerals" in lowercase.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Manual |first=Chicago |date=2024-04-16 |title=Announcing The Chicago Manual of Style, 18th Edition |url=https://cmosshoptalk.com/2024/04/16/announcing-the-chicago-manual-of-style-18th-edition/ |access-date=2024-09-17 |website=CMOS Shop Talk |language=en-US}}</ref> It removed the chapter on Mathematicsmathematics in type (citing low usage) but increased its coverage of citations of Indigenous languages (now with capital "I") and of Korean.
 
==Recent printed editions==