E.g. vs. i.e.
E.g. vs. i.e.
Among the Latin abbreviations, e.g.
and i.e. can be considered to belong the most commonly misused.
While both terms are deemed to be formal, using them in informal, business, or
technical writing is acceptable. Other than being both abbreviations of Latin
phrases, these two share no other similarities.
The abbreviation e.g. is
short of the Latin phrase exempli gratia, which means “for example.”
“However, if the polling place is
held in a location with a firearm ban (e.g., a school), that is obviously still
in effect on Election Day.”
CNN
“Often fails to give close
attention to details or makes careless mistakes in schoolwork, work, or during
other activities (eg, overlooks
or misses details, work is inaccurate).”
The Irish Times
“Today, the tech industry is
developing AI platforms and tools (e.g. Microsoft’s and IBM’s open source AI
toolkits and APIs) that can be
operated by non-specialists.”
Huffington Post
On the other hand, the
abbreviation i.e. is short for the Latin phrase id est, which means “that
is,” “namely,” or “in other words.” A simple way to determine whether you are
using the abbreviation correctly is to replace it with “in other words” and if
it makese sense, then you are using it properly.
“… legislators have made it
illegal to advertise temporary accommodation for less than 30 days if you live in
a “multi unit”, i.e, an apartment building.”
BBC
“Does beating Texas A&M on
Thanksgiving move Coach O into position of being the fallback candidate if the
Tigers can’t get their target — i.e. Jimbo Fisher?”
The Washington Post
“We hope that chosen policies
will not throw the macroeconomic baby (i.e., decent cyclical dynamics and low
nominal volatility) out with the structural bathwater (i.e., low productivity
and dissatisfaction by many households over what they see as slowly rising
living standards).”
Bloomberg
Even though they are Latin
abbreviations, there is no need to italicize both terms as they are generally
considered Standard English.
A good way to remember when to
use e.g. and i.e. is to take note of the first letters. Since e.g.
starts with the letter “e,” you use it to give examples while
i.e., which starts with the letter “i” should be used to mean “in
other words.”
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