Word count
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A word count is the number of words that a document contains. Knowing the number of words in a document is sometimes important, for instance if the author is required to stay within certain minimum or maximum bounds, particularly in academia, legal proceedings, journalism and advertising. Word counts are also important in defining typing and reading speeds (usually measured in words per minute), and they are also occasionally used to differentiate different categories of writing, particularly prose writing, for judgment in literary contests.
Word counts may also be important for spoken pieces. Formal speaking in English is usually around 100 to 120 words per minute; thus, for example, an eight-minute speech would contain roughly 800 to 960 words.
The command wc in Unix/Linux can do automatic word counts, as can many word processors. Different word counting programs may give unequal results for the same document, depending on the text segmentation algorithms used, or whether footnotes are counted.
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[edit] Word Counts in publishing
Publishers often estimate book size by number of pages rather than word count: this measure includes white space. In professional publishing, 250 words per page is generally considered to be standard.[citation needed] This standard was set in earlier times, when most manuscripts (MS) were prepared on typewriters with fixed pitch fonts.[citation needed] Most publishers accept manuscripts in any clear, easily readable font, but the old guideline of 250 words per page is still the norm.[citation needed] Thus, a book of 100 pages is deemed to contain roughly 25,000 words.
A document containing 65,000 words in publishers' terms may be counted by a computer program to contain only 50,000 words.[citation needed]
The majority of Microsoft Word programs give a word count broken down into the number of pages, words, characters (no spaces), characters (with spaces), paragraphs, and lines with a checkbox to include footnotes and endnotes.
[edit] Document types defined by word counts
For many kinds of prose or poetry writing, a word count can help determine the classification of the piece of writing, although the exact thresholds vary depending on the organization making the classification.[citation needed]
Classification | Typical word count |
---|---|
Epic | At least 80,000-100,000 (or 200,000) words |
Novel | At least 80,000 words |
Novella | At least 17,500 (or less than 80,000) words |
Novelette | At least 7,500 words |
Short story | At least 1,000 (or 2,000) words |
Flash fiction | Less than 1,000 (or 2,000) words |
The Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America association uses word count length for determining Nebula awards categories.[1]
The acceptable length of an academic thesis varies greatly, dependent predominantly on the subject. Griffith University gives the following maximums (not including appendices or footnotes):[citation needed]
- Doctor of Philosophy: 100,000 words
- Master of Philosophy: 50,000 words
- Doctor of Education: 50,000 words
- Doctor of Visual Arts: 20,000 words
[edit] External links
- Macintosh (Apple) Word Counter powerful stand-alone application for Mac OS X.
- A free web-based cut-and-paste word count JavaScript script
- A free word, letter and character counter
[edit] Notes
[edit] References
- DeRocher, James E.; Miron, Murray S.; Patten, Sam M. & Pratt, Charles C. (1973), The Counting of Words: A Review of the History, Techniques and Theory of Word Counts with Annotated Bibliography, Syracuse University Research Corporation.
- Rothman, Chuck (2005), Word Counts: What Is a Word?, Science Fiction Writers of America, <http://www.sfwa.org/writing/wordcount.htm>. An article on various word count methods in fiction publishing.
- Michaels, Melisa (2005), Focusing on the Wrong Things, Science Fiction Writers of America, <http://www.sfwa.org/writing/wordcountredux.htm>. An article on the relative importance of various word count methods in fiction publishing.