Posts Tagged ‘Web Site vs Website’

Ahead of the Curve — or Treading Water?

Wednesday, November 11th, 2009

At T.MOSS when we troll the waters of social and technological change it’s to make sure we’re keeping our friends informed of significant tidal shifts. Thanks for paddling with us.

Sometimes we note an undercurrent — a change in process, usage or style that draws our attention. A case in point –

You say tomato, I say tomahto

When we first started writing about “the Web”, there wasn’t a hard and fast rule for using the term “website.” We researched it, and based on usage common among leading publications, dictionaries and style manuals, we made an informed decision on the standard T.MOSS would follow. We decided to use Web site. That was then.

Well, we’ve taken another look around and now find that usage is trending toward website. Here’s what we’ve discovered. According to Dictionary.com:

“The transition from World Wide Web site to Web site to website as a single uncapitalized word mirrors the development of other technological expressions which have tended to take unhyphenated forms as they become more familiar. Thus email is gaining ground over the forms E-mail and e-mail, especially in texts that are more technologically oriented. Similarly, there is an increasing preference for closed forms like homepage, online, and printout.”

Further, though they do acknowledge “Web site” and “web site” as alternatives; American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, Webster’s New World CollegeDictionary, Compact Oxford English Dictionary and Cambridge Advanced Learners Dictionary list “website” as the preferred spelling — just to name a few sources. Britannica Online Encyclopedia was the only reference we found that used “Web site” exclusively — and you know how fusty the old men in monocles can be.

Let’s see, is it Beyonce or Brenda Lee?

Our conclusion: though you’ll continue to see Web site and web site in print; it looks like website has won the day. So, lest your customers and colleagues assume you’re out of touch because you use Web site instead of website — remember the flak George W. Bush got when he made reference to “the Internets” — now’s the time for a little re-education.


Website  |  Email  |  Blog  |  Podcast  |  Facebook  |  Twitter

And, if you still think Facebook is a computer game teenagers play with their friends, it’s definitely time to step into the wide world of social media and do a little poking around. To stay literate, you should at least begin to explore the explosion of new tools businesses, large and small, now use to reach out to their customers – before the next generation of innovations comes along and changes the game yet again. Who knows, in a few years tweeting may seem as outmoded as shouting at your customers through a megaphone.

by Dianne Clay, Librarian