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==Explanation==
 
==Explanation==
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{{incomplete|Created by a Classicist and a Mathematician. The table based on the graph needs to be edited, giving a percentage approval rating to the different styles of writing. This may pick up an item at 65% which would be neat. Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
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On March 29, 2019, The {{w|AP Stylebook}} changed a long-standing rule that forbade press writers from using the percent sign (%) when writing percentages. This had long been a controversial rule, leading to much debate over the preferable way to write percentages, before the Associated Press finally conceded the point.  
 
On March 29, 2019, The {{w|AP Stylebook}} changed a long-standing rule that forbade press writers from using the percent sign (%) when writing percentages. This had long been a controversial rule, leading to much debate over the preferable way to write percentages, before the Associated Press finally conceded the point.  
  
 
The comic lists the best to worst ways in which you can write out phrases that are phonetically the same as "65%".  They go from the common "65%" and "65 percent" to "65 per cent," which is not common in Randall's area and time, to the eccentric "sixty-five%" and "65 per¢" (using the cent currency symbol) which are not used in normal writing and would stand out like a sore thumb when read. The middle option, "65 per cent", was common in older literature, along with "65 per cent.", using "cent." as an abbreviation for "centum", which is Latin for "hundred". ("per" in Latin translates to "through", "for", and several other English prepositions.) The entire string would translate to "65 for every hundred." "Per cent" is more widely used in British English than in American English today.
 
The comic lists the best to worst ways in which you can write out phrases that are phonetically the same as "65%".  They go from the common "65%" and "65 percent" to "65 per cent," which is not common in Randall's area and time, to the eccentric "sixty-five%" and "65 per¢" (using the cent currency symbol) which are not used in normal writing and would stand out like a sore thumb when read. The middle option, "65 per cent", was common in older literature, along with "65 per cent.", using "cent." as an abbreviation for "centum", which is Latin for "hundred". ("per" in Latin translates to "through", "for", and several other English prepositions.) The entire string would translate to "65 for every hundred." "Per cent" is more widely used in British English than in American English today.
  
A small gap between the ends of the bar and the best and worst options may suggest the existence of even better and worse options not listed in this comic, such as "6ty5/¢".
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A small gap between the ends of the bar and the best and worst options may suggest the existence of even better and worse options not listed in this comic, such as "65/¢".
  
 
Other abbreviations not mentioned in the comic include "pct.", "pct" or "pc". See {{w|Percentage}}.
 
Other abbreviations not mentioned in the comic include "pct.", "pct" or "pc". See {{w|Percentage}}.
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People sometimes train a cat out of a bad behavior, such as scratching upholstery, by spritzing the cat with water when the cat does the undesired behavior. In this case, Randall's friends found him so annoying they trained him out saying "per kent" by spraying him with water every time he pronounced it that way. Training people this way was previously a punchline in [[220: Philosophy]], while training a cat this way was previously a punchline in [[1786: Trash]].
 
People sometimes train a cat out of a bad behavior, such as scratching upholstery, by spritzing the cat with water when the cat does the undesired behavior. In this case, Randall's friends found him so annoying they trained him out saying "per kent" by spraying him with water every time he pronounced it that way. Training people this way was previously a punchline in [[220: Philosophy]], while training a cat this way was previously a punchline in [[1786: Trash]].
  
===Styles and their acceptability===
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===Table===
;65%
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{| class="wikitable"
:This is the standard way of writing percentages. Randall's approval acceptability is 98%.
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! Percentage label
;65 percent
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! Percent good
:This one has no space, it is more common in American English. Rating: 97 percent
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! Explanation
;65 per cent
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|-
:This one has a space, it is more common in British English. Rating: 86 per cent
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! 65%
;Sixty-five%
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!
:This one writes out the number, but not the percent sign. Rating: Sixty%
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! This is the standard symbol
;65 per¢
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|-
:This one uses the cent symbol in place of the word cent, which is incorrect in this context, as ''cent'' here does not refer to a currency. Rating: 2 per¢
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! 65 percent
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!
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! This one has no space, it is more common in American English
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|-
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! 65 per cent
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!
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! This one has a space, it is more common in British English
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|-
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! 65 per¢
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!
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! This one uses the cent symbol in place of the word cent, which is rarely, if ever, used in this context.
  
 
==Transcript==
 
==Transcript==
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{{incomplete transcript|Do NOT delete this tag too soon.}}
 
:Percentage styles in order of acceptability
 
:Percentage styles in order of acceptability
 
:[A long vertical line is shown with five dots on it.]
 
:[A long vertical line is shown with five dots on it.]
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     <!-- How smart are screen readers at recognizing the differences?-->
 
     <!-- How smart are screen readers at recognizing the differences?-->
 
:65%<!-- ["6", "5" and a "%" symbol]-->
 
:65%<!-- ["6", "5" and a "%" symbol]-->
:[very short distance]
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:[short distance]
 
:65 percent<!-- ["6", "5" and the word "percent"]-->
 
:65 percent<!-- ["6", "5" and the word "percent"]-->
:[at roughly quarter scale]
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:[a much longer distance]
 
:65 per cent<!-- ["6", "5" and two words "per" and "cent"]-->
 
:65 per cent<!-- ["6", "5" and two words "per" and "cent"]-->
:[at roughly half scale]
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:[a distance roughly twice the previous]
 
:Sixty-five%<!-- ["Sixty-five" as a word and a "%" symbol]-->
 
:Sixty-five%<!-- ["Sixty-five" as a word and a "%" symbol]-->
:[at the end]
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:[an exceedingly long distance]
 
:65 per¢<!-- ["6", "5", the word "per" and the "¢" currency symbol]-->
 
:65 per¢<!-- ["6", "5", the word "per" and the "¢" currency symbol]-->
  

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