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Results 581 - 590 of 685 for capitalization.
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[Forum]
RE: capitalization on second reference
When referring to a particular foundation (or anything else for that matter) and omit its proper name — "Acme" in this case — the noun 'foundation' should not be capitalized. |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization
I would use the spelling that is in the person's actual title, not change it. If you are referring to the US national security advisor, that's the correct spelling. |
[Forum]
RE: City Hall capitalization?
I would not capitalize that term in either of those sentences. And I can't imagine when it would ever be appropriate to capitalize it. AP and CMOS differ on numerous things. |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization of "Old Man" when used as a form of address
I concur with RG to keep it lowercase. It's not really a name or nickname (or even a term of endearment, in this case), but rather a derogatory term used as an insult. |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization
[url=http://www.chicagomanualofstyle.org/16/ch08/ch08_sec078.html]CMOS does have an extensive list of styles for such things[/url], but it can't list everything. |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization in dialog.
[quote='BlackPyramid' pid='21050' dateline='1416095894']
Lowercase "is" because it's a part of the same sentence.
[/quote]
Precisely. |
[Forum]
RE: bitcoin
Well, for what it's worth, [i]M-W Unabridged Online[/i] capitalizes it but includes a notation reading "also bitcoin." So I suppose their preference would be capitalization. |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization and Punctuation of Academic Degrees
Hi Maggie and welcome,
Short answer:
I'd say "a bacehlor's degree in nursing" and "a bachelor of arts" (no caps unless it would be customary in the context). I would omit "degree" because it seems redundant to me.
Longer explanation:
Merriam-Webster uses "a bachelor of laws," and CMOS [ |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization
So, I did a search on Google Books for "subaltern studies", and saw that when it's not being used as a title of a book, it is often left lowercase. There's precedent for you. I'd make it lowercase. |
[Forum]
RE: Capitalization
Yes, yes! And let's not leave out "those," another term that often gets bandied about with no clarification. A book I'm currently overseeing the editing of contains "one," "some," and "those" repeatedly. It's driving me bonkers (or, more accurately, more bonkers). |