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Please don't post in capitals! And it's question , not cuestion . HOW CAN YOU SAY WHEN YOU CUT YOUR HAIR REALLY SHORT? Use this style: What can you say when you cut your hair really short? _______ It's hard to understand what you
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Hi,
1.'desire to learn about ..' To get information about something
or 'desire to learn of ..' S ometimes focuses on learning about something for the first time, learning whether or not something exists. eg He was fifteen
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Hi Anon,
First, please don't write in all capital letters. It's considered shouting on the Internet.
Many style guides suggest you write numbers from one to ten and use numerals for numbers higher than that.
I have two
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It's true that things change. Many people remember (or think they do, as you say with your "almost certain") being taught to capitalize the seasons. I didn't look for historical style guides to see if there was a time 30, 60, or
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You need periods or, as appropriate, question marks at the end of all your sentences. The word "I" is always capitalised. Do not imagine that capitalisation and punctuation are unimportant. If you care at all about writing properly then
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condone: to regard or treat (something bad or blameworthy) as acceptable, forgivable, or harmless.(m-w.com) style manual: a book that gives guidance in the preparation of manuscripts for publication, particularly with regard to punctuation,
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Hi Clive, By "caption style" I meant the style used for captions when each non-preposition in a phrase is capitalized. For instance: "Position: S oftware E ngineer in T est" Not sure that this term exists in any style or
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Hi,
Generally speaking, we commonly capitalize all the words in a title or subtitle, although sometimes not the minor words in the middle like 'of', the'. However, if the title is a complete sentence and not just a phrase,
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Stephen, I normally would not have commented either. However, you don't capitalize although you know that you should. You attribute this to your laziness, while requesting others to use a little forethought for the sake of elegant text. By the
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If the word "the" is a proper part of the name then it should be capitalised ("The"), but in some cases it may be open to interpretation whether this is the case, so different people may use different capitalisation styles.
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