Japan Center The Florida-Japan Linkage Institute and the Jikei-American Center.
Japan House Building 71, part of the International Center. The two facilities together are referred to as the International Center and Japan House.
Jikei-American Center
John C. Pace Library Main campus library. Use of the Pace Library is acceptable on second reference.
John C. Pace Jr. Hall Student residence hall named for the late UWF benefactor. Pace Hall is acceptable on second reference.
John C. Pace Jr. Scholar, or Pace Scholar Student attending the university under a four-year scholarship funded by the John C. Pace Jr. Endowment.
Jr., Sr., III Do not precede with a comma: Joe Johnson Jr. except in business correspondence. Numerals with proper names never take comma: Joe Johnson III.
jump start Two words when used as either a noun or a verb, no hyphen.
junior See student classifications.
kickoff
Landscape Services
lectures Capitalize and use quotation marks for their formal titles, as described in compositions titles.
legislative titles Use Rep., Reps., Sen. and Sens. as formal titles before one or more names in regular text. When necessary for clarification, use: Sen. Bob Graham or U.S. Rep. Bob Sikes. Spell out and capitalize these titles before one or more names in a direct quotation. Spell out and lowercase representative and senator in other uses. Spell out other legislative titles in all uses. Capitalize formal titles such as assemblyman, assemblywoman, city councilor, delegate, etc. when they are used before a name. Lowercase in other uses. For more details, see the AP Stylebook.
legislature Capitalize when preceded by the name of a state: the Florida Legislature. Retain capitalization when the state name is dropped but the reference is specifically to that state’s legislature.
less See fewer.
libel, slander Libel refers to injury through written, printed or pictorial statements; slander to similar injury through utterance of defamatory statements. One is printed or published, the other is spoken.
libraries The Pensacola campus library is the John C. Pace Library.
lifeblood
like, as Use like as a preposition to compare nouns and pronouns. It requires an object: Jim blocks like a pro. The conjunction as is the correct word to introduce clauses: Zac blocks the linebacker as Rex drops back for a pass.
like, such as Like means similar to but not including. While like is used in every day speech to list examples, such as is preferred: Vegetables such as carrots, lettuce and cucumbers are part of a healthy diet.
login, logon, logoff
long term, long-term Hyphenate when used as a compound modifier: He has a long-term assignment, but We will win in the long term.