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Bitte um Hilfe: Schreibt man "Dr." im AE mit oder ohne Punkt?
mit; ohne ist BE
Vielen Dank, dude!!!
Basically, any abbreviation in AE ends with a period.
That's not quite correct. Take US or USA, for example, or OR, CA, and TX. And there are many more like that. You're probably talking about the abbreviation of a single word, but abbreviations entail more than just a word:
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ab...
Definition of abbreviation
1
: a shortened form of a written word or phrase used in place of the whole word or phrase"Amt" is an abbreviation for "amount."
"USA" is an abbreviation of "United States of America."
Das mag unerheblich sein, aber sind US, USA etc. nicht eher Akronyme?
siehe auch: http://davidappleyard.com/english/punctuation...
US and USA might be acronyms, but certainly the states' abbreviations aren't. And isn't an acronym also a type of abbreviation?
I recall that Edward Gibbon noted that Christianity was nearly split by an iota (homoousios v. homoiousios).
The world will not end if you do, or do not, put a dot after Dr. If you are the final instance, make up your own mind. If you aren't, someone else will add/remove it for you.
#8 May be true for BE, but AE much expects a period there! If your job is AE, why annoy a proofreader (assuming you have one)? Sorry, for AE, that's bad advice.
OT: The homoousios v. homoiousious comment was perfect for the day.
OT re #9: much expects
Is that AE?
I don't know if it's AE or not, but it's really not that unusual in any case.
It would be unusual in BE, we'd very much expect a "very" if using "much" there :)
https://books.google.de/books?id=kZMiAAAAQBAJ...
(Unless this was a "doge" meme of course - to bring the level of discussion back down from those homoiousian
heights.)
Of course "very" is possible (and perhaps more common), but I didn't include that. It really seems superfluous.
The "very" would be as superfluous to me as the "." after "Dr" is to you, then, hb :)