Return to all Offices & Services College Communications Who We Are How It Works Portfolio & Case Studies Frequently Asked Questions Editorial Style Guide Graphic Identity Social Media News Room MiddMag.com Working on the Web Read the latest Middlebury Magazine Site Editor Log On Editorial Guide Contents Condensed Style Guide Spelling & Capitalization Abbreviations Accent Marks Addresses Apostrophe Awards Bias-Free Content Capitalization Class Years & Degrees Collective Nouns Colon Comma Commonly Confused Words Compound Adjectives & Nouns Conjunctions Dates, Time & Eras Ellipsis Points E-mail Foreign Expressions Hyphens & Dashes Jr., Sr., & III Letters Used as Letters or Words Letters: Preferred Format Middlebury Non-Discrimination Statement Numbers Possessives Quotation Marks Semicolon Sentence Fragments Spacing Split Infinitives States Superscripts Telephone Numbers They/Their/Them Titles Vertical Lists Voice Web Home » Offices & Services » News & Information » College Communications » Editorial Style Guide » Accent Marks Accent Marks Foreign words that have been incorporated into English often retain their original accents. Check the dictionary when in doubt—use first spelling. vis-à-vis; déjà vu