H

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handouts (course materials), citing

APA style

MLA style

hanged, hung

hardly

avoiding in double negatives

usage note

hardware requirements, for online course

has got, have got, avoiding

hasty generalization

has. See have

have, as irregular verb

have

perfect tenses

present-tense forms of have

verb tenses commonly used in the passive voice

helping verb

irregular verb

nonstandard usage

subject-verb agreement (have vs. has)

quick help: subject-verb agreement

s form in present tense

subject-verb agreement at a glance

headers in document

sample memo header with page number

headings

APA style

Chicago style

CSE style

formatting

MLA style

organizing ideas with

APA style

Chicago style

parallelism

wording

he, him, his

generic he, him, his

generic pronouns

helping verbs (auxiliary verbs)

quick help: verbs

forming perfect tenses

contractions

defined

modals as

needed

passive voice

perfect tenses

progressive forms

verb tenses commonly used in the passive voice

help page in online course platform

contact information for technical support

her vs. she

pronoun case

subjective vs. objective case

he/she, his/her

slash in

usage note

he vs. him

pronoun case

subjective vs. objective case

here, not used as subject

he writes, she writes, comma with

hisself (nonstandard)

historical context

questions to ask about literature

writing in history

home page

for online course

home page for English Composition I

announcements on

for Web page project

homophones (words that sound alike)

hook

providing a hook in your introduction

using in introduction

hopefully

however (conjunctive adverb)

avoiding with but or although

at beginning of sentence

comma with

semicolon with

“how to” boxes, citing sources, MLA style

how to determine the author of reposted files

how to identify the author of Web sources

how to cite course materials

HTML sources

humanities, writing in. See also MLA papers, Chicago papers

citation style

commonalities across disciplines

questions to ask

evidence in

evidence typically used in various disciplines

language conventions

point of view and verb tense in academic writing

questions to ask

approaching assignments in the disciplines

hung, hanged

hyphen. See also dashes

with adjectives

to avoid ambiguity

between double or triple letters (cross-stitch)

with compound modifiers (full-metal jacket)

with compound words (sister-in-law)

with fractions (three-fourths)

with numbers (forty-seven)

with prefixes (ex-senator)

in URLs

in word division