11.12 Is it a good idea to make my title concise
by having a string of nouns?
The title in S1 is almost incomprehensible for a reader.
S1. *Cultural heritage audiovisual material multilingual search gathering requirements
However, for the author S1 will be perfectly clear. You, as an author, know exactly
what your title means and so for you it does not seem a problem to put lots of nouns
together with no prepositions or verbs. Some of my students have even told me that
it to them it seems “more English and more elegant”. This is simply not the case.
A much clearer version of S1 is S2.
S2. Gathering requirements for multilingual searches for audiovisual materials in the cultural
heritage
171
11.12 Is it a good idea to make my title concise by having a string of nouns?
Below are some more examples.
original version (ov)
revised version (rv)
Educational software specification definitions
trends
Trends in defining the specifications for
educational software
Examining narrative cinema fiction and fact
boundaries
Examining the boundaries between fiction
and fact in narrative cinema
New archaeological research and teaching
technologies
New technologies for research and teaching
in archaeology
What the RVs highlight is that the order of the nouns has been reversed. In the OVs
there is a series of nouns that premodify (describe) the final noun. However, these
final nouns (trends, boundaries, technologies) are not usually used in English in
combination with another noun.
Melanie Bell, who researches English language at the University of Cambridge,
comments:
Although native speakers string nouns together, especially when coining terms in technical
language, it’s probably safer to avoid creating multiword compounds of more than two, or
perhaps three, words. English tends to be clearer if nouns are not used in a long string but
are broken up by the use of prepositions and verbs that show how the nouns are related to
one another.
The OVs are examples of concatenations of nouns, and the RVs represent phrasal
options. By ‘coining terms’ Bell means creating a combination of nouns that has
never existed before: specification definitions trends and fact boundaries are
examples of such combinations. The difference between a native speaker and a
non-native speaker, is that a native speaker intuitively knows whether a combina-
tion sounds right or not, whereas a non-native rarely has this ability. If you are not
sure whether a combination exists or not, then check with Google Scholar. If you
are combining relatively common words (including technical words) and you don’t
get at least 100,000 returns, there is a good chance that your combination of nouns
does not exist. In such cases you can simply adopt the method highlighted in
the RVs. This method involves using verbs (Sect.
11.8
) and prepositions
(Sect.
11.13
).
However, strings of nouns and adjectives must be used if they are names of pieces
of equipment or procedures. Here are some examples taken from the Methods sec-
tion of three papers.
An Oxford Link SATW ultra-thin window EDX detector
A Hitachi S3500N environmental scanning electron microscope
A recently developed reverse Monte Carlo quantification method
For more on this topic see Sects.
2.14
and
2.15
.
172
11 Titles
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