Alphabetical order
From Simple English Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Alphabetical order is a way to sort (organize) a list. It makes it easier to find a name or a title in the list. It is done by following the standard (usual) order of letters in an alphabet. Sorting things in English is done using the Roman alphabet. Different languages have different rules for sorting.
A list of items like Eric, Lydia, Andrea, and Bob is organized by their first letter. A comes before B, and B comes before E, and E comes before L in the alphabet. When alphabetical order is used:
- Andrea
- Bob
- Eric
- Lydia
If many words have the same first letter, they are sorted by their second letters.
- Larry
- Leonard
- Linda
- Lydia
After that, the third and fourth letters are used until the whole list is sorted.
The words a, an and the are ignored. Sometimes they are written at the end, after a comma. Spaces and hyphens ( - ) are ignored, too.
- A Long Day's Journey Into Night
- The Long Goodbye
- Longhand: A Writer's Notebook
- The Long Road Home
- Long Voyage Back
- The Long Walk
That can also be listed like this:
- Long Day's Journey Into Night, A
- Long Goodbye, The
- Longhand: A Writer's Notebook
- Long Road Home, The
- Long Voyage Back
- Long Walk, The
Names are usually ordered by Family name, not given name.
- Gene Hackman
- Tom Hanks
- Katharine Hepburn
- Jennifer Love Hewitt
Names are often written with the last names first.
- Hackman, Gene
- Hanks, Tom
- Hepburn, Katharine
- Hewitt, Jennifer Love
Numbers can be sorted in two ways. Sometimes, they are listed in order from smallest to largest. This is the normal way to sort numbers.
- 1
- 3
- 9
- 18
- 27
- 81
Other times, they can be sorted as if they were normal, spelled-out words. This way is often used for numbers in titles.
- Eighteen
- Eighty-one
- One
- Nine
- Three
- Twenty-seven