interactive content
Among leading style guides, the Reuters style guide,[6] The Chicago Manual of Style,[7] and the AP Stylebook (since April 2010)[8] all recommend "website".
Among leading dictionaries and encyclopedias, the Canadian Oxford Dictionary prefers "website", and the Oxford English Dictionary changed to "website" in 2004.[9] Wikipedia also uses "website", but Encyclopædia Britannica uses both "Web site" and "Website".[10] Britannica's Merriam-Webster subsidiary uses "Web site", recognising "website" as a variant.[11]
Among leading language-usage commentators, Garner's Modern American Usage says that "website" is the standard form,[12] but Bill Walsh, of The Washington Post, argues for using "Web site" in his books and on his website[13] (however, The Washington Post itself uses "website"[14]).
Among major Internet technology companies and corporations, Google uses "website",[15] as does Apple,[16] though Microsoft uses both "website" and "web site"
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