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uncapitalized查看 uncapitalized 在百度字典中的解释百度英翻中〔查看〕
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  • In what contexts would I capitalize city and county?
    In the first example, county is referring to a generic county, so I suspect it is a common noun (and can remain uncapitalized) In the second example, I am not sure whether city is proper (and consequently, whether to capitalize)
  • Upper-case is to capital as lowercase is to what?
    The word is actually " uncapitalized " It is "Upper case" to "capital letter" as "lower-case" is to "uncapitalized letter" (Uncapitalized is an adjective, so "uncapitalized word" There is no noun form, "Uncapital" or anything like, as far as I know, though "non-capital" might be intuitive in context) Granted, it's a bit clunky - one reason uncapitalized letters are usually referred to as
  • Is there an antonym for “capitalize” (as in letter-case)?
    uncapitalize (third-person singular simple present uncapitalizes, present participle uncapitalizing, simple past and past participle uncapitalized) (transitive) To convert the first letter (or more) of (something) from uppercase to lowercase; to make uncapitalized
  • capitalization - When should the word God be capitalized? - English . . .
    Overall, the hyphenated uncapitalized and unspaced uncapitalized forms are about equally common The hyphenated capitalized form was the next most common, but significantly less common, followed by other rare variants Oh my God For the first 1000 results for oh my god, they were divided like this: 710 Oh my God 139 Oh my god 95 oh my God 38 oh
  • Capitalize fields of study? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange
    It depends If you are referring to the title of a course or a major field of study, in a formal sense, then capitalize it I took Computer Science 101, which was a survey course Otherwise, just leave it uncapitalized I'm interested in studying computer science
  • Capitalization of idioms in titles - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    In a title, which words are capitalized will depend on the stylistic concerns of your medium, but generally it will be: first word, last word, and main words, with secondary words (conjunctions less than five letters, prepositions, articles, etc) left uncapitalized
  • How to cite an author who does not capltalize her name if you are . . .
    If you are writing a paper and citing works by an author researcher who does not capitalize her name, how do you begin a sentence using the author's name?
  • capitalization - Should “Hell” be capitalized? - English Language . . .
    The Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary also allows for it to remain uncapitalized Its capitalization then is possibly due to its religious significance and not its reference to a specific place Checking several bibles (that is as real as hell can be) also shows that it need not be capitalized
  • history - Capitalizing U in United States - English Language . . .
    The first two lines of the Declaration of Independence are: IN CONGRESS, July 4, 1776 The unanimous Declaration of the thirteen united States of America, The first two lines Article I of the Articles of Confederation of 1781 are: ARTICLE I The Stile of this Confederacy shall be "The United States of America" So united was initially not capitalized, but United States with capitalization was
  • What are the different rules for capitalization of prepositions in . . .
    In the third case, a is an article and therefore uncapitalized In the fourth case, the same-spelled word is no longer an article but a noun, so it is capitalized The guidance that you don't capitalize articles or short prepositions still applies It's just easy for people to mistake things that look the same but aren't one of those





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