Question | Answer |
Bibliography | an alphabetical list of sources of information used in writing a report |
Block Style | a letter style in which all lines of the letter are aligned with the left margin |
Body | the message of the letter or memo |
Business Letter | a letter that is sent from one company or organization to another; a letter head is usually used on a business letter |
Carpal Tunnel Syndrome | the entrapment of the medium nerve in the carpal tunnel, swelling of the nerves and tendons will occur in the wrist |
Complimentary Close | the farewell of the letter; some examples are Sincerely and Cordially |
Copy Notation | a special notation at the end of a letter that indicates copies of letter was sent to the person(s) listed, usually noted by typing CC: |
Dateline | the date that the letter was created |
DeQuervain’s Disease | an overuse injury of the thumb extensor tendons, often occurs from repetitive tapping of the space bar |
Double Spacing | the type of spacing where you would manually press the enter key two times and a blank line would be between each keyed line |
Enclosure Notation | a special notation at the end of a letter that indicates that an item(s) is included with the letter, usually the word Enclosure |
Envelope | the paper covering for a letter to be sent through the mail |
Ergonomics | the science of designing equipment and workspace for a comfortable and safe working environment |
Guide Words | a heading typed at the beginning of a memorandum consisting of TO, FROM, DATE, SUBJECT; these four words should be typed in bold, all caps, and should be followed by a colon |
GWAM | (Gross Words A Minute) the number of keystrokes a typist can make in a timed period; can calculate by dividing the total number of words keyed by the number of minutes that the typist was timed |
Home Row Keys | A, S, D, F, J, K, L, and semi-colon ( ; )-these are designated as the keys from which all keystrokes are made |
Inside Address | the name and address of the person or company receiving the letter (also known as the mailing address) |
Keyboarding | the ability to enter text by using the correct fingers without looking at the keys (aka-touch typing) |
Left bound Report | multi-page reports that are bound or stapled on the left side of the pages; the left margin is set wider to allow space for binding |
Letterhead | stationary that contains a company’s name, address, phone/fax number and email address |
Line Spacing | the vertical spacing between lines of text, there are 66 lines per page |
Memorandum | a form of written correspondence within the same company or organization that contains guide words as the heading |
Outline | a supporting document in a report; it is usually placed after the title page and before the first page of the report |
Paper Size | the size of a standard sheet of paper is 8 ½ x 11 inches |
Personal Business Letter | a letter that is from an individual to a business or organization |
Proofreader Marks | marks that are used to correct a copy |
Proofreading | the process of comparing a copy on screen or paper to the original copy and marking errors for correction |
Quadruple Spacing | the type of spacing where you would manually press the enter key four times and three blank lines would be between each keyed line |
QWERTY Keyboard | the most common keyboard arrangement, named for the first letters across the top row |
Reference Initials | initials of the person that typed the letter or memo if different from the writer; initials should be double-spaced after the body and typed in lowercase |
Repetitive Stress Injury | occurs when someone performs a task repeatedly causing the build up of irritating waste products in the muscles |
Return Address | the sender’s address, is typed in a personal letter and is part of the letterhead in a business letter |
Salutation | the greeting of the letter |
Signature Line | the name of the person sending the letter |
Single Spacing | the type of spacing where you would manually press the enter key one time and no blank lines are between each keyed line |
Technique | the form and keying style that a typist uses while operating the keyboard |
Title Page | a supporting document of a report; presented as the first page and includes the title, the writer’s name, date, the course, and teacher’s name |
Triple Spacing | the type of spacing where you would manually press the enter key three times and two blank lines would be between each keyed line |
Unbound Report | short reports that are prepared without binders or covers |