Do you italicize fictional company names?
Generally in fiction writing, you don't italicize company names (even though you would italicize the name of a newspaper).
But what do you do if the company name is fictional, especially a name that is not a real word (Like Schwaye). Italicizing it would make it clearer to the reader that it is a name (and not a typo). It would also make the name easier to read.
What happens if the text has a mix of fictional and real world company names (e.g. the BBC and Schwaye). It seems a bit odd to have a mix of italics and roman.
Example:
Alice would always go to Adam's restaurant.
[Couple of chapters later]
After leaving Adam's, Angela checked her email. She had got a message from Schway, the famous social network, which was even bigger than Facebook or Twitter.
versus:
Alice would always go to Adam's restaurant.
[Couple of chapters later]
After leaving Adam's, Angela checked her email. She had got a message from Schway, the famous social network, which was even bigger than Facebook or Twitter.
I'm not sure but I feel it might read easier with italics (especially Adam's)
This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/21429. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
1 answer
Company and brand names are not set off in italics, period. It's irrelevant whether the name is real or fictional.
The kinds of names/titles which do take italics:
- Publications (newspapers, magazines)
- Books
- Albums
- TV shows
- Movies
- Court cases
May or may not take italics depending on house style:
- Newsletters
- Blogs
- Podcasts
- Videogames
But there's no reason to italicize the name of a brand (Apple, Pepsi), social network (Twitter, Facebook), or restaurant (Le Bec Fin, McCloskey's). These are names of products, services, or establishments. You are establishing what the named item is in context, and by the capital letter(s). For example:
We picked up an apple at the store.
We picked up a Mac at the store.
We picked up a mackintosh at the store.
The first is a piece of fruit, the second a computer, and the third a raincoat. It takes very little to make that clear, and italics aren't necessary. Calling attention to the fictional nature of your product or service will only be a distraction and make your reader wonder why you're calling it out.
Italics in fiction can be used to indicate thoughts (internal dialogue, or telepathy if your story has it) and foreign languages.
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