Here is a quote from WWF's website:
For 50 years, WWF has been protecting the future of nature. The world's leading conservation organization, WWF works in 100 countries and is supported by 1.2 million members in the United States and close to 5 million globally.
The HTML <q> element defines a short quotation.
Browsers usually insert quotation marks around the <q> element.
The HTML <blockquote> element defines a quoted section.
Browsers usually indent <blockquote> elements.
The HTML <abbr> element defines an abbreviation or an acronym.
Marking abbreviations can give useful information to browsers, translation systems and search-engines.
The HTML <dfn> element defines the definition of a term or an abbreviation.
The usage of <dfn>, as described in the HTML5 standard, is complicated:
1. If the title attribute of the <dfn> element is present, it defines the term:
2. If the <dfn> element contains an <abbr> element with a title, then that title defines the term:
3. Otherwise, the <dfn> text content is the term, and the parent element contains the definition.
If you want to keep it simple, use the first form, or use <abbr> instead. |
The HTML <address> element defines contact information (author/owner) of a document or article.
The element is usually displayed in italic. Most browsers will add a line break before and after the element.
The HTML <cite> element defines the title of a work.
Browsers usually displays <cite> elements in italic.
The HTML <bdo> element defines bi-directional override.
If your browser supports bdo, this text will be written from right to left:
Tag | Description |
---|---|
<abbr> | Defines an abbreviation or acronym |
<address> | Defines contact information for the author/owner of a document |
<bdo> | Defines the text direction |
<blockquote> | Defines a section that is quoted from another source |
<dfn> | Defines the definition of a term or an abbreviation. |
<q> | Defines a short inline quotation |
<cite> | Defines the title of a work |