Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies

A muraqqa' by the Istanbul-born calligrapher Yedikuleli Seyid Abdullah (d. 1144/1731).

ISSN: 0806-198X

Editors: Lutz E. Edzard and Stephan Guth, Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages (IKOS), University of Oslo, Norway
Home > style sheet

Journal of Arabic and Islamic Studies: Style Sheet

Paper size (A4) and margins

Top: 5.2 cm; bottom: 6 cm; left: 4.8 cm; right: 4.8 cm

Gutter: 0; Header: 4.35 cm from edge; Footer: 3 cm from edge Gutter position: left

Text height: about 19.2 cm

Text width: 11.4 cm

Fonts, typesetting and copy-editing

Arial MS Unicode; Times New Roman (Vista version); JaghbUni; Lucida Grande (Mac).

font size: 11

footnotes: 10

footnote references: 8 (automatic)

block quotations: 10

poetry: 10

page numbers: automatic from word processor

title: 13 caps, centered, not bold, size 11 space after

author: size 11 italics, centered, size 11 space after

place/institution: size 10 small caps, centered, size 8 space after

abstract: font size 10, indent 0.4 cm before text, 0.25 after; begin with flush paragraph, 8 point space after

A-level subheads: 11 caps, centered, 12 points before, 6 after paragraph

B-level subheads: 11 italics, title capitalization, flush, 6 points before paragraph, followed by flush paragraph

C-level subheads: 11 italics indented with paragraph, followed by period

Line spacing: normally automatic, or single 

Paragraph spacing: no extra leading

Paragraph indentation: 0,4 cm

Block quotation spacing: 6 points before and after

Block quotation indentation: none  

Paragraph indentation in block quotations: 0,4 cm (Indent first line if it is the beginning of a new paragraph in the source.)

Poetry indentation, first hemistich: 0,8 cm

Poetry indentation, second hemistich: 1,2 cm

Notes may either be embedded in the text (author-date system) or placed at the bottom of the page as footnotes. Endnotes should not be used in fully formatted documents. The Journal does not require that all authors adhere to the same system for references to sources or other notes, but consistency is expected.

In US English, use the double quote character (“/”) for quotations, and the single quote (‘/’) for sub-quotations. Or the British system may be used if spelling is British. Please use “smart,” quotes, as here, and avoid confusing apostrophe with hamza or 'ayn, which are separate characters.

Adjectival and adverbial hybrids formed from foreign words (example: "Hanbalite") should not be italicized.

Details about contributing an article

Submit an article

Copyright: Notes for Contributers

Style Sheet

 

| Home | Read the Journal | Submit an Article |
| Editorial Board |