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I am writing an essay on filmmaking immediately after the second world war, but am having great difficulties expressing this time period.
The question refers to the war as WWII, however I feel that in an essay such shortening is different to the style I am writing in. I was taught to never write 'can't' in an essay, because it should be 'can not', 'isn't' because it is 'is not'. It feels a bit strange.
I tried lengthening it to World War 2, which again feels wrong because I was told that in essays you should avoid using numerals for numbers where words would fit.
So then I write World War Two and find that this looks odd because of the string of capitals, and I wonder "should I actually capitalise this?" It just looks so strange when it isn't a proper noun. Or maybe it is.
I am thinking, as the question was phrased using WWII, I should use this, but it just sticks out like a sore thumb. Heck, all of them do, but I want to use the right one.
No best answer has yet been selected by flashpig. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I would refer to it the first time as 'the second World War', and thereafter 'WWII', if I was writing such an essay.
Also, unless your essay's being marked by the person who told you not to use can't, won't etc, then I'd try to get used to using them. I'm doing a postgrad course at the moment, and I've never encountered any oppostion to using them, either in my current course or my undergraduate degree (or at any time in school or sixth-form college, for that matter). Contractions are part of normal language usage and (I find) pieces of writing that are all 'cannot' and 'is not' sound stilted and as if the writer's first language is probably not English. But obviously if you think your tutor will object, then it's not worth losing marks over!
hi Flashie
You're the fella with the headache. And here you are with another one.
what about - the War? or even the war ?
If you can get this dilemma into your essay, then there is a good quote from an eighteenth century mathematician Euler.
non notatione sed notione
not by notation but by the notion
use it in the context of it is not important what one calls the period, but what is important are the ideas in the period. (period = length of time to us brits by the way)
hope this helps