→{{Anchor|EABI}}Embedded ABI: Speak of the PowerPC, Arm, and MIPS EABIs rather than of PowerPC, the Arm EABI, and the MIPS EABI, omitting "EABI" from "PowerPC".
Widely used EABIs include the [[PowerPC]],<ref name="ppc-eabi"/> [[Arm architecture|Arm]] EABI,<ref>{{cite web|url=https://developer.arm.com/architectures/system-architectures/software-standards/abi |title=ABI for the Arm Architecture |publisher=Developer.arm.com |access-date=4 February 2020}}</ref> and [[MIPS architecture|MIPS]] EABIEABIs.<ref>{{cite mailing list |url=https://sourceware.org/legacy-ml/binutils/2003-06/msg00436.html |author=Eric Christopher |title=mips eabi documentation |mailing-list=binutils@sources.redhat.com |date=11 June 2003 |access-date=19 June 2020}}</ref> Specific software implementations like the C library may impose additional limitations to form more concrete ABIs; one example is the GNU OABI and EABI for ARM, both of which are subsets of the ARM EABI.<ref>{{cite web |title=ArmEabiPort |url=https://wiki.debian.org/ArmEabiPort |website=Debian Wiki |quote=Strictly speaking, both the old and new ARM ABIs are subsets of the ARM EABI specification, but in everyday usage the term "EABI" is used to mean the new one described here and "OABI" or "old-ABI" to mean the old one.}}</ref>