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| Abbreviation & Acronym
Finders General
- Acronym Finder (http://www.acronymfinder.com/)
is a searchable acronym database that is fairly
comprehensive. A nice feature about this site is
that you can sort the results by topic such as
"most common," "military &
government" or "business & finance."
There are some annoying distractions such as
advertising banners and commercial links, but for
a quick search, it's very handy.
- Stands4 (http://www.stands4.com)
is another searchable acronym database. You can
search by acronym or you can also browse
alphabetically or by categories such as Business,
Governmental and International. The broad
categories are then further subdivided into more
specific categories such as Military,
Transportation and U.S. Government under
Governmental.
Government
- Abbreviations and
Acronyms of the U.S. Government, created by
Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis
Library, is arranged alphabetically by the title
of the organization. You can jump to a specific
letter rather than having to scroll through the
entire list. This website also provides links to
the official website of the agency, department or
program.
- Commonly Used
Abbreviations and Acronyms, Appendix A, can
be found in The United States Government
Manual. Click the Government Manual link.
Scroll down the page to "browse a list of
documents." Click the most current year.
Scroll down the "List of Documents" and
you will find Appendix A near the bottom in pdf
or text format. The list is arranged
alphabetically with no searching capabilities.
- USLinks has an
acronyms index arranged as an alphabetical table.
When you click on the acronym, it goes to a brief
description of the agency and provides a link to
the agency's website as well as a link to the
parent agency description and website if
applicable.
Legal
- Acronyms and
Abbreviations is an alphabetically arranged
list of acronyms and abbreviations that includes
publications (the full titles are printed in
italics); bar associations and legal
organizations; federal and state agencies,
boards, commissions, and departments; legal
terms; court rules; statutes; and electronic
databases and services. It is not as
comprehensive and there is a heavy emphasis on
Washington state legal materials. Hypertext links
have been added for selected court rules, federal
and state agencies, publications, and
organizations. This resource was created by the
Marian Gould Gallagher Law Library at the
University of Washington School of Law.
- The Association of Legal
Writing Directors provides three useful
appendices of abbreviations in the ALWD
Citation Manual Appendices. Appendix 3 is a
list of general abbreviations, appendix 4 is a
list of court abbreviations and appendix 5 is a
list of legal periodical abbreviations. The
appendices are in pdf format.
- Bieber's Dictionary of
Legal Abbreviations is available on Lexis.
On the search menu bar, select "command
search" and then type LEXREF;BIEBLA
in the search box which will take you to the file.
You can search by the abbreviation to find the
full text using the "term" segment or
search by full text to find the abbreviation
using the "text" segment. Example: TERM(DOL)
to find Department of Labor or TEXT(Department
of Labor) to find DOL.
- Bluebook Abbreviations of
Law Review Titles is a list of law review
titles in alphabetical order with the
abbreviation listed beneath the title. It is a
browsable list and you can jump to a specific
letter of the alphabet to cut down on scrolling
time. This resource was created by the Marian
Gould Gallagher Law Library at the University of
Washington School of Law.
- Legal Citation
Abbreviation Archives provides abridged lists
of abbreviations for administrative publications,
court actions, reporters, periodicals and code
sources among others. This site contains a search
engine for the US Publications file that can be
searched by keyword or jurisdiction. There is
also a keyword search engine for US Courts &
associated reporters. You can type in a state
such as Florida and the list will provide the
name of the court, the abbreviation, the reporter
to cite and its abbreviation.
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