## STYLE SHEET ### TITLE (UPPER CASE, BOLD, CENTRED) AUTHOR (UPPERCASE, REGULAR) #### PART ONE, TWO etc (UPPER CASE, BOLD) ##### **Main heading** (lower case, bold) ###### _Sub-heading_ (lower case, italics) Sub sub-heading (lower case, underlined, regular) Text1 (lower case, regular) #### **Table title** (lower case, bold, centred) #### **Figure title** (lower case, bold, centred) ### REFERENCES (UPPER CASE, BOLD) Samples * (Book) Hayes, James (1996). Friends and teachers: Hong Kong and its people, 1953-1987. Hong Kong: Hong Kong University Press * (Chapter in a book) Pearson, Veronica, and Yu, Rose Y.M. (1995). Business and pleasure: Aspects of the commercial sex industry, in Pearson, Veronica, and Leung, Benjamin, K.P. (Eds.), Women in Hong Kong, Hong Kong: Oxford University Press (China) Ltd * (Article in a journal) Waters, Dan (2000). Laughter across the Great Wall: A comparison of Chinese and Western humour, The Journal of the Hong Kong Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society, 38:1-50 ### NOTES (UPPER CASE, BOLD) A word on punctuation Punctuation is not an exact science and styles vary. The Journal's style for quotation marks, however, is: direct verbal or written quotes single quotation marks; and anything else in quotes - double quotation marks. Please ensure that quotation marks "wrap around" commas and full stops, e.g. 'Life's greatest tragedy,' wrote Han Suyin in *A Many Splendoured Thing*, 'is not to love.' 1. Endnotes only (regular) viii
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