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Wikipedia

Letter case

Letter case is the distinction between the letters that are in larger uppercase or capitals (or more formally majuscule) and smaller lowercase (or more formally minuscule) in the written representation of certain languages. The writing systems that distinguish between the upper and lowercase have two parallel sets of letters, with each letter in one set usually having an equivalent in the other set. The two case variants are alternative representations of the same letter: they have the same name and pronunciation and are treated identically when sorting in alphabetical order.

The lower-case "a" and upper-case "A" are the two case variants of the first letter in the English alphabet.

Letter case is generally applied in a mixed-case fashion, with both upper and lowercase letters appearing in a given piece of text for legibility. The choice of case is often prescribed by the grammar of a language or by the conventions of a particular discipline. In orthography, the uppercase is primarily reserved for special purposes, such as the first letter of a sentence or of a proper noun (called capitalisation, or capitalised words), which makes the lowercase the more common variant in regular text.

In some contexts (e.g. academical), it is conventional to use one case only. For example, engineering design drawings are typically labelled entirely in uppercase letters, which are easier to distinguish individually than the lowercase when space restrictions require that the lettering be very small. In mathematics, on the other hand, letter case may indicate the relationship between mathematical objects, with uppercase letters often representing “superior” objects (e.g., X could be a mathematical set containing the generic member x).

Terminology

 
Divided upper and lower type cases with cast metal sorts
 
Layout for type cases

The terms upper case and lower case may be written as two consecutive words, connected with a hyphen (upper-case and lower-case – particularly if they pre-modify another noun[1]), or as a single word (uppercase and lowercase). These terms originated from the common layouts of the shallow drawers called type cases used to hold the movable type for letterpress printing. Traditionally, the capital letters were stored in a separate shallow tray or "case" that was located above the case that held the small letters.[2][3]

Majuscule (/ˈmæəskjuːl/, less commonly /məˈʌskjuːl/), for palaeographers, is technically any script whose letters have very few or very short ascenders and descenders, or none at all (for example, the majuscule scripts used in the Codex Vaticanus Graecus 1209, or the Book of Kells). By virtue of their visual impact, this made the term majuscule an apt descriptor for what much later came to be more commonly referred to as uppercase letters.

Minuscule refers to lower-case letters. The word is often spelled miniscule, by association with the unrelated word miniature and the prefix mini-. This has traditionally been regarded as a spelling mistake (since minuscule is derived from the word minus[4]), but is now so common that some dictionaries tend to accept it as a nonstandard or variant spelling.[5] Miniscule is still less likely, however, to be used in reference to lower-case letters.

Typographical considerations

The glyphs of lowercase letters can resemble smaller forms of the uppercase glyphs restricted to the base band (e.g. "C/c" and "S/s", cf. small caps) or can look hardly related (e.g. "D/d" and "G/g"). Here is a comparison of the upper and lower case variants of each letter included in the English alphabet (the exact representation will vary according to the typeface and font used):

Uppercase A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z
Lowercase a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z

(Some lowercase letters have variations e.g. a/ɑ)

Typographically, the basic difference between the majuscules and minuscules is not that the majuscules are big and minuscules small, but that the majuscules generally have the same height (although, depending on the typeface, there may be some exceptions, particularly with Q and sometimes J having a descending element; also, various diacritics can add to the normal height of a letter).

 
Ascenders (as in "h") and descenders (as in "p") make the height of lower-case letters vary.

There is more variation in the height of the minuscules, as some of them have parts higher (ascenders) or lower (descenders) than the typical size. Normally, b, d, f, h, k, l, t [note 1] are the letters with ascenders, and g, j, p, q, y are the ones with descenders. In addition, with old-style numerals still used by some traditional or classical fonts, 6 and 8 make up the ascender set, and 3, 4, 5, 7 and 9 the descender set.

Bicameral script

 
Handwritten Cyrillic script
 
Adyghe Latin alphabet, used between 1927 and 1938, was based on Latin script, but did not have capital letters, being unicameral (small caps include ᴀ, ʙ, ᴣ, ʀ, , ᴘ, and  .

A minority of writing systems use two separate cases. Such writing systems are called bicameral scripts. Languages that use the Latin, Cyrillic, Greek, Coptic, Armenian, Adlam, Warang Citi, Cherokee, Garay, Zaghawa, and Osage scripts use letter cases in their written form as an aid to clarity. Another bicameral script, which is not used for any modern languages, is Deseret. The Georgian alphabet has several variants, and there were attempts to use them as different cases, but the modern written Georgian language does not distinguish case.[7]

All other writing systems make no distinction between majuscules and minuscules – a system called unicameral script or unicase. This includes most syllabic and other non-alphabetic scripts.

In scripts with a case distinction, lower case is generally used for the majority of text; capitals are used for capitalisation and emphasis when bold is not available. Acronyms (and particularly initialisms) are often written in all-caps, depending on various factors.

Capitalisation

Capitalisation is the writing of a word with its first letter in uppercase and the remaining letters in lowercase. Capitalisation rules vary by language and are often quite complex, but in most modern languages that have capitalisation, the first word of every sentence is capitalised, as are all proper nouns.[citation needed]

Capitalisation in English, in terms of the general orthographic rules independent of context (e.g. title vs. heading vs. text), is universally standardised for formal writing. Capital letters are used as the first letter of a sentence, a proper noun, or a proper adjective. The names of the days of the week and the names of the months are also capitalised, as are the first-person pronoun "I"[8] and the vocative particle "O". There are a few pairs of words of different meanings whose only difference is capitalisation of the first letter. Honorifics and personal titles showing rank or prestige are capitalised when used together with the name of the person (for example, "Mr. Smith", "Bishop O'Brien", "Professor Moore") or as a direct address, but normally not when used alone and in a more general sense.[9][10] It can also be seen as customary to capitalise any word – in some contexts even a pronoun[11] – referring to the deity of a monotheistic religion.

Other words normally start with a lower-case letter. There are, however, situations where further capitalisation may be used to give added emphasis, for example in headings and publication titles (see below). In some traditional forms of poetry, capitalisation has conventionally been used as a marker to indicate the beginning of a line of verse independent of any grammatical feature. In political writing, parody and satire, the unexpected emphasis afforded by otherwise ill-advised capitalisation is often used to great stylistic effect, such as in the case of George Orwell's Big Brother.

Other languages vary in their use of capitals. For example, in German all nouns are capitalised (this was previously common in English as well, mainly in the 17th and 18th centuries), while in Romance and most other European languages the names of the days of the week, the names of the months, and adjectives of nationality, religion, and so on normally begin with a lower-case letter.[12] On the other hand, in some languages it is customary to capitalise formal polite pronouns, for example De, Dem (Danish), Sie, Ihnen (German), and Vd or Ud (short for usted in Spanish).

Informal communication, such as texting, instant messaging or a handwritten sticky note, may not bother to follow the conventions concerning capitalisation, but that is because its users usually do not expect it to be formal.[8]

Exceptional letters and digraphs

  • The German letter "ß" formerly existed only in lower case. The orthographical capitalisation does not concern "ß", which generally does not occur at the beginning of a word, and in the all-caps style it has traditionally been replaced by the digraph "SS". Since June 2017, however, capital ẞ is accepted as an alternative in the all-caps style.[13]
  • The Greek upper-case letter "Σ" has two different lower-case forms: "ς" in word-final position and "σ" elsewhere. In a similar manner, the Latin upper-case letter "S" used to have two different lower-case forms: "s" in word-final position and " ſ " elsewhere. The latter form, called the long s, fell out of general use before the middle of the 19th century, except for the countries that continued to use blackletter typefaces such as Fraktur. When blackletter type fell out of general use in the mid-20th century, even those countries dropped the long s.[citation needed]
  • The treatment of the Greek iota subscript with upper-case letters is complicated.
  • Unlike most languages that use Latin-script and link the dotless upper-case "I" with the dotted lower-case "i", Turkish as well as some forms of Azeri have both a dotted and dotless I, each in both upper and lower case. Each of the two pairs ("İ/i" and "I/ı") represents a distinctive phoneme.
  • In some languages, specific digraphs may be regarded as single letters, and in Dutch, the digraph "IJ/ij" is even capitalised with both components written in uppercase (for example, "IJsland" rather than "Ijsland").[14] In other languages, such as Welsh and Hungarian, various digraphs are regarded as single letters for collation purposes, but the second component of the digraph will still be written in lower case even if the first component is capitalised. Similarly, in South Slavic languages whose orthography is coordinated between the Cyrillic and Latin scripts, the Latin digraphs "Lj/lj", "Nj/nj" and "Dž/dž" are each regarded as a single letter (like their Cyrillic equivalents "Љ/љ", "Њ/њ" and "Џ/џ", respectively), but only in all-caps style should both components be in upper case (e.g. Ljiljan–LJILJAN, Njonja–NJONJA, Džidža–DŽIDŽA).[citation needed] Unicode designates a single character for each case variant (i.e., upper case, title case and lower case) of the three digraphs.[15]
  • Some English surnames such as fforbes are traditionally spelt with a digraph instead of a capital letter (at least for ff). This indicates a long and prestigious family tradition.[citation needed]
  • In the Hawaiian orthography, the ʻokina is a phonemic symbol that visually resembles a left single quotation mark. Representing the glottal stop, the ʻokina can be characterised as either a letter[16] or a diacritic.[17] As a unicase letter, the ʻokina is unaffected by capitalisation; it is the following letter that is capitalised instead. According to the Unicode standard, the ʻokina is formally encoded as U+02BB ʻ MODIFIER LETTER TURNED COMMA,[18] but it is not uncommon to substitute this with a similar punctuation character, such as the left single quotation mark or an apostrophe.[19]

Related phenomena

Similar orthographic and graphostylistic conventions are used for emphasis or following language-specific or other rules, including:

  • Font effects such as italic type or oblique type, boldface, and choice of serif vs. sans-serif.
  • Typographical conventions in mathematical formulae include the use of Greek letters and the use of Latin letters with special formatting such as blackboard bold and blackletter.
  • Some letters of the Arabic and Hebrew alphabets and some jamo of the Korean hangul have different forms depending on placement within a word, but these rules are strict and the different forms cannot be used for emphasis.
    • In the Arabic and Arabic-based alphabets, letters in a word are connected, except for several that cannot connect to the following letter. Letters may have distinct forms depending on whether they are initial (connected only to the following letter), medial (connected to both neighboring letters), final (connected only to the preceding letter), or isolated (connected to neither a preceding nor a following letter).
    • In the Hebrew alphabet, five letters have a distinct form (see Final form) that is used when they are word-final.
  • In Georgian, some authors use isolated letters from the ancient Asomtavruli alphabet within a text otherwise written in the modern Mkhedruli in a fashion that is reminiscent of the usage of upper-case letters in the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets.
  • In the Japanese writing system, an author has the option of switching between kanji, hiragana, katakana, and rōmaji. In particular, every hiragana character has an equivalent katakana character, and vice versa. Romanised Japanese sometimes uses lowercase letters to represent words that would be written in hiragana, and uppercase letters to represent words that would be written in katakana. Some kana characters are written in smaller type when they modify or combine with the preceding sign (yōon) or the following sign (sokuon).

Stylistic or specialised usage

 
Alternating all-caps and headline styles at the start of a New York Times report published in November 1919. (The event reported is Arthur Eddington's test of Einstein's theory of general relativity.)

In English, a variety of case styles are used in various circumstances:

Sentence case
"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
A mixed-case style in which the first word of the sentence is capitalised, as well as proper nouns and other words as required by a more specific rule. This is generally equivalent to the baseline universal standard of formal English orthography.
In computer programming, the initial capital is easier to automate than the other rules. For example, on English-language Wikipedia, the first character in page titles is capitalised by default. Because the other rules are more complex, substrings for concatenation into sentences are commonly written in "mid-sentence case", applying all the rules of sentence case except the initial capital.
Title case (capital case, headline style)
"The Quick Brown Fox Jumps over the Lazy Dog"
A mixed-case style with all words capitalised, except for certain subsets (particularly articles and short prepositions and conjunctions) defined by rules that are not universally standardised. The standardisation is only at the level of house styles and individual style manuals. (See further explanation below at § Headings and publication titles.)
Start case (First letter of each word capitalized)
"The Quick Brown Fox Jumps Over The Lazy Dog"
Start case or initial caps is a simplified variant of title case. In text processing, title case usually involves the capitalisation of all words irrespective of their part of speech.
All caps (all uppercase)
"THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG"
A unicase style with capital letters only. This can be used in headings and special situations, such as for typographical emphasis in text made on a typewriter. With the advent of the Internet, the all-caps style is more often used for emphasis; however, it is considered poor netiquette by some to type in all capitals, and said to be tantamount to shouting.[20] Long spans of Latin-alphabet text in all upper-case are more difficult to read because of the absence of the ascenders and descenders found in lower-case letters, which aids recognition and legibility. In some cultures it is common to write family names in all caps to distinguish them from the given names, especially in identity documents such as passports.
Small caps
"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
Similar in form to capital letters but roughly the size of a lower-case "x", small caps can be used instead of lower-case letters and combined with regular caps in a mixed-case fashion. This is a feature of certain fonts, such as Copperplate Gothic. According to various typographical traditions, the height of small caps can be equal to or slightly larger than the x-height of the typeface (the smaller variant is sometimes called petite caps and may also be mixed with the larger variant).[21] Small caps can be used for acronyms, names, mathematical entities, computer commands in printed text, business or personal printed stationery letterheads, and other situations where a given phrase needs to be distinguished from the main text.
All lowercase
"the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"
 
Steve Jobs's signature as seen on the inner side of the original Macintosh, using lower case cursive
A unicase style with no capital letters. This is sometimes used for artistic effect, such as in poetry. Also commonly seen in computer languages, and in informal electronic communications such as SMS language and instant messaging (avoiding the shift key, to type more quickly). Apple co-founder Steve Jobs used all-lowercase (in cursive) in his signature.[22]
A comparison of various case styles (from most to least capitals used)
Case style Example Description
All-caps  THE   VITAMINS   ARE   IN   MY   FRESH   CALIFORNIA   RAISINS  All letters uppercase
Start case The Vitamins Are In My Fresh California Raisins All words capitalised regardless of function
Title case The Vitamins Are in My Fresh California Raisins The first word and all other words capitalised except for articles and short prepositions and conjunctions
German-style sentence case The Vitamins are in my fresh California Raisins The first word and all nouns capitalised
Sentence case The vitamins are in my fresh California raisins The first word, proper nouns and some specified words capitalised
Mid-sentence case the vitamins are in my fresh California raisins As above but excepting special treatment of the first word
All-lowercase the vitamins are in my fresh california raisins All letters lowercase (unconventional in English prose)

Headings and publication titles

In English-language publications, various conventions are used for the capitalisation of words in publication titles and headlines, including chapter and section headings. The rules differ substantially between individual house styles.

The convention followed by many British publishers (including scientific publishers like Nature and New Scientist, magazines like The Economist, and newspapers like The Guardian and The Times) and many U.S. newspapers is sentence-style capitalisation in headlines, i.e. capitalisation follows the same rules that apply for sentences. This convention is usually called sentence case. It may also be applied to publication titles, especially in bibliographic references and library catalogues. An example of a global publisher whose English-language house style prescribes sentence-case titles and headings is the International Organization for Standardization (ISO).

For publication titles it is, however, a common typographic practice among both British[23] and U.S. publishers to capitalise significant words (and in the United States, this is often applied to headings, too). This family of typographic conventions is usually called title case. For example, R. M. Ritter's Oxford Manual of Style (2002) suggests capitalising "the first word and all nouns, pronouns, adjectives, verbs and adverbs, but generally not articles, conjunctions and short prepositions".[24] This is an old form of emphasis, similar to the more modern practice of using a larger or boldface font for titles. The rules which prescribe which words to capitalise are not based on any grammatically inherent correct–incorrect distinction and are not universally standardised; they differ between style guides, although most style guides tend to follow a few strong conventions, as follows:

  • Most styles capitalise all words except for short closed-class words (certain parts of speech, namely, articles, prepositions, and conjunctions); but the first word (always) and last word (in many styles) are also capitalised, regardless of their part of speech. Many styles capitalise longer prepositions such as "between" and "throughout", but not shorter ones such as "for" and "with".[25] Typically, a preposition is considered short if it has up to three or four letters.
  • A few styles capitalise all words in title case (the so-called start case), which has the advantage of being easy to implement and hard to get "wrong" (that is, "not edited to style"). Because of this rule's simplicity, software case-folding routines can handle 95% or more of the editing, especially if they are programmed for desired exceptions (such as "FBI" rather than "Fbi").
  • As for whether hyphenated words are capitalised not only at the beginning but also after the hyphen, there is no universal standard; variation occurs in the wild and among house styles (e.g., "The Letter-Case Rule in My Book"; "Short-term Follow-up Care for Burns"). Traditional copyediting makes a distinction between temporary compounds (such as many nonce [novel instance] compound modifiers), in which every part of the hyphenated word is capitalised (e.g. "How This Particular Author Chose to Style His Autumn-Apple-Picking Heading"), and permanent compounds, which are terms that, although compound and hyphenated, are so well established that dictionaries enter them as headwords (e.g., "Short-term Follow-up Care for Burns").

Title case is widely used in many English-language publications, especially in the United States. However, its conventions are sometimes not followed strictly – especially in informal writing.

In creative typography, such as music record covers and other artistic material, all styles are commonly encountered, including all-lowercase letters and special case styles, such as studly caps (see below). For example, in the wordmarks of video games it is not uncommon to use stylised upper-case letters at the beginning and end of a title, with the intermediate letters in small caps or lower case (e.g., ArcaniA, ArmA, and DmC).

Multi-word proper nouns

Single-word proper nouns are capitalised in formal written English, unless the name is intentionally stylised to break this rule (such as the first or last name of danah boyd).

Multi-word proper nouns include names of organisations, publications, and people. Often the rules for "title case" (described in the previous section) are applied to these names, so that non-initial articles, conjunctions, and short prepositions are lowercase, and all other words are uppercase. For example, the short preposition "of" and the article "the" are lowercase in "Steering Committee of the Finance Department". Usually only capitalised words are used to form an acronym variant of the name, though there is some variation in this.

With personal names, this practice can vary (sometimes all words are capitalised, regardless of length or function), but is not limited to English names. Examples include the English names Tamar of Georgia and Catherine the Great, "van" and "der" in Dutch names, "von" and "zu" in German, "de", "los", and "y" in Spanish names, "de" or "d'" in French names, and "ibn" in Arabic names.

Some surname prefixes also affect the capitalisation of the following internal letter or word, for example "Mac" in Celtic names and "Al" in Arabic names.

Unit symbols and prefixes in the metric system

 
Of the seven SI base-unit symbols, "A" (ampere for electric current) and "K" (kelvin for temperature), both named after people, are always written in upper case, whereas "s" (second for time), "m" (metre for length), "kg" (kilogram for mass), "cd" (candela for luminous intensity), and "mol" (mole for amount of substance) are written in lower case.

In the International System of Units (SI), a letter usually has different meanings in upper and lower case when used as a unit symbol. Generally, unit symbols are written in lower case, but if the name of the unit is derived from a proper noun, the first letter of the symbol is capitalised. Nevertheless, the name of the unit, if spelled out, is always considered a common noun and written accordingly in lower case.[26] For example:

For the purpose of clarity, the symbol for litre can optionally be written in upper case even though the name is not derived from a proper noun.[26] For example, "one litre" may be written as:

  • 1 l, the original form, for typefaces in which "digit one" ⟨1⟩, "lower-case ell" ⟨l⟩, and "upper-case i" ⟨I⟩ look different.
  • 1 L, an alternative form, for typefaces in which these characters are difficult to distinguish, or the typeface the reader will be using is unknown. A "script l" in various typefaces (e.g.: 1 l) has traditionally been used in some countries to prevent confusion; however, the separate Unicode character which represents this, U+2113 SCRIPT SMALL L, is deprecated by the SI.[27] Another solution sometimes seen in Web typography is to use a serif font for "lower-case ell" in otherwise sans-serif material (1 l).

The letter case of a prefix symbol is determined independently of the unit symbol to which it is attached. Lower case is used for all submultiple prefix symbols and the small multiple prefix symbols up to "k" (for kilo, meaning 103 = 1000 multiplier), whereas upper case is used for larger multipliers:[26]

  • 1 ms, millisecond, a small measure of time ("m" for milli, meaning 10−3 = 1/1000 multiplier).
  • 1 Ms, megasecond, a large measure of time ("M" for mega, meaning 106 = 1 000 000 multiplier).
  • 1 mS, millisiemens, a small measure of electric conductance.
  • 1 MS, megasiemens, a large measure of electric conductance.
  • 1 mm, millimetre, a small measure of length.
  • 1 Mm, megametre, a large measure of length.

Use within programming languages

Some case styles are not used in standard English, but are common in computer programming, product branding, or other specialised fields.

The usage derives from how programming languages are parsed, programmatically. They generally separate their syntactic tokens by simple whitespace, including space characters, tabs, and newlines. When the tokens, such as function and variable names start to multiply in complex software development, and there is still a need to keep the source code human-readable, Naming conventions make this possible. So for example, a function dealing with matrix multiplication might formally be called:

    • SGEMM(*), with the asterisk standing in for an equally inscrutable list of 13 parameters (in BLAS),
    • MultiplyMatrixByMatrix(Matrix x, Matrix y), in some hypothetical higher level manifestly typed language, broadly following the syntax of C++ or Java,
    • multiply-matrix-by-matrix(x, y) in something derived from LISP, or perhaps
    • (multiply (x y)) in the CLOS, or some newer derivative language supporting type inference and multiple dispatch.

In each case the capitalisation or lack thereof supports a different function. In the first, FORTRAN compatibility requires case-insensitive naming and short function names. The second supports easily discernible function and argument names and types, within the context of an imperative, strongly typed language. The third supports the macro facilities of LISP, and its tendency to view programs and data minimalistically, and as interchangeable. The fourth idiom needs much less syntactic sugar overall, because much of the semantics are implied, but because of its brevity and so lack of the need for capitalization or multipart words at all, might also make the code too abstract and overloaded for the common programmer to understand.

Understandably then, such coding conventions are highly subjective, and can lead to rather opinionated debate, such as in the case of editor wars, or those about indent style. Capitalisation is no exception.

Camel case

Camel case: "theQuickBrownFoxJumpsOverTheLazyDog" or "TheQuickBrownFoxJumpsOverTheLazyDog"
Spaces and punctuation are removed and the first letter of each word is capitalised. If this includes the first letter of the first word (CamelCase, "PowerPoint", "TheQuick...", etc.), the case is sometimes called upper camel case (or, illustratively, CamelCase), Pascal case in reference to the Pascal programming language[28] or bumpy case.

When the first letter of the first word is lowercase ("iPod", "eBay", "theQuickBrownFox..."), the case is usually known as lower camel case or dromedary case (illustratively: dromedaryCase). This format has become popular in the branding of information technology products and services, with an initial "i" meaning "Internet" or "intelligent"[citation needed], as in iPod, or an initial "e" meaning "electronic", as in email (electronic mail) or e-commerce (electronic commerce).

Snake case

Snake case: "the_quick_brown_fox_jumps_over_the_lazy_dog"
Punctuation is removed and spaces are replaced by single underscores. Normally the letters share the same case (e.g. "UPPER_CASE_EMBEDDED_UNDERSCORE" or "lower_case_embedded_underscore") but the case can be mixed, as in OCaml modules.[29] The style may also be called pothole case, especially in Python programming, in which this convention is often used for naming variables. Illustratively, it may be rendered snake_case, pothole_case, etc. When all-upper-case, it may be referred to as screaming snake case (or SCREAMING_SNAKE_CASE) or hazard case.[30]

Kebab case

Kebab case: "the-quick-brown-fox-jumps-over-the-lazy-dog"
Similar to snake case, above, except hyphens rather than underscores are used to replace spaces. It is also known as spinal case, param case, Lisp case in reference to the Lisp programming language, or dash case (or illustratively as kebab-case). If every word is capitalised, the style is known as train case (TRAIN-CASE).[citation needed]

In CSS, all property names and most keyword values are primarily formatted in kebab case.

Studly caps

Studly caps: e.g. "tHeqUicKBrOWnFoXJUmpsoVeRThElAzydOG"
Mixed case with no semantic or syntactic significance to the use of the capitals. Sometimes only vowels are upper case, at other times upper and lower case are alternated, but often it is simply random. The name comes from the sarcastic or ironic implication that it was used in an attempt by the writer to convey their own coolness. It is also used to mock the violation of standard English case conventions by marketers in the naming of computer software packages, even when there is no technical requirement to do so – e.g., Sun Microsystems' naming of a windowing system NeWS. Illustrative naming of the style is, naturally, random: stUdlY cAps, StUdLy CaPs, etc.

Case folding and case conversion

In the character sets developed for computing, each upper- and lower-case letter is encoded as a separate character. In order to enable case folding and case conversion, the software needs to link together the two characters representing the case variants of a letter. (Some old character-encoding systems, such as the Baudot code, are restricted to one set of letters, usually represented by the upper-case variants.)

Case-insensitive operations can be said to fold case, from the idea of folding the character code table so that upper- and lower-case letters coincide. The conversion of letter case in a string is common practice in computer applications, for instance to make case-insensitive comparisons. Many high-level programming languages provide simple methods for case conversion, at least for the ASCII character set.

Whether or not the case variants are treated as equivalent to each other varies depending on the computer system and context. For example, user passwords are generally case sensitive in order to allow more diversity and make them more difficult to break. In contrast, case is often ignored in keyword searches in order to ignore insignificant variations in keyword capitalisation both in queries and queried material.

Unicode case folding and script identification

Unicode defines case folding through the three case-mapping properties of each character: upper case, lower case, and title case (in this context, "title case" relates to ligatures and digraphs encoded as mixed-case single characters, in which the first component is in upper case and the second component in lower case[31]). These properties relate all characters in scripts with differing cases to the other case variants of the character.

As briefly discussed in Unicode Technical Note #26,[32] "In terms of implementation issues, any attempt at a unification of Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic would wreak havoc [and] make casing operations an unholy mess, in effect making all casing operations context sensitive […]". In other words, while the shapes of letters like A, B, E, H, K, M, O, P, T, X, Y and so on are shared between the Latin, Greek, and Cyrillic alphabets (and small differences in their canonical forms may be considered to be of a merely typographical nature), it would still be problematic for a multilingual character set or a font to provide only a single code point for, say, uppercase letter B, as this would make it quite difficult for a wordprocessor to change that single uppercase letter to one of the three different choices for the lower-case letter, the Latin b (U+0062), Greek β (U+03B2) or Cyrillic в (U+0432). Therefore, the corresponding Latin, Greek and Cyrillic upper-case letters (U+0042, U+0392 and U+0412, respectively) are also encoded as separate characters, despite their appearance being basically identical. Without letter case, a "unified European alphabet" – such as ABБCГDΔΕЄЗFΦGHIИJ...Z, with an appropriate subset for each language – is feasible; but considering letter case, it becomes very clear that these alphabets are rather distinct sets of symbols.

Methods in word processing

Most modern word processors provide automated case conversion with a simple click or keystroke. For example, in Microsoft Office Word, there is a dialog box for toggling the selected text through UPPERCASE, then lowercase, then Title Case (actually start caps; exception words must be lowercased individually). The keystroke ⇧ Shift+F3 does the same thing.

Methods in programming

In some forms of BASIC there are two methods for case conversion:

UpperA$ = UCASE$("a") LowerA$ = LCASE$("A") 

C and C++, as well as any C-like language that conforms to its standard library, provide these functions in the file ctype.h:

char upperA = toupper('a'); char lowerA = tolower('A'); 

Case conversion is different with different character sets. In ASCII or EBCDIC, case can be converted in the following way, in C:

int toupper(int c) { return islower(c) ? c  'a' + 'A' : c; } int tolower(int c) { return isupper(c) ? c  'A' + 'a' : c; } 

This only works because the letters of upper and lower cases are spaced out equally. In ASCII they are consecutive, whereas with EBCDIC they are not; nonetheless the upper-case letters are arranged in the same pattern and with the same gaps as are the lower-case letters, so the technique still works.

Some computer programming languages offer facilities for converting text to a form in which all words are capitalised. Visual Basic calls this "proper case"; Python calls it "title case". This differs from usual title casing conventions, such as the English convention in which minor words are not capitalised.

History

 
Latin majuscule inscription on the Arch of Titus (82 CE)
 
Papyrus fragment with old Roman cursive script from the reign of Claudius (41–54 CE)
 
Example of Greek minuscule text Codex Ebnerianus (c. 1100 CE)
 
Combined case with capital letters above small letters
 
Late 19th-century mixed cases
 
Demonstrating the use of a composing stick in front of divided upper and lower type cases at the International Printing Museum in Carson, California, United States, North America

Originally alphabets were written entirely in majuscule letters, spaced between well-defined upper and lower bounds. When written quickly with a pen, these tended to turn into rounder and much simpler forms. It is from these that the first minuscule hands developed, the half-uncials and cursive minuscule, which no longer stayed bound between a pair of lines.[33] These in turn formed the foundations for the Carolingian minuscule script, developed by Alcuin for use in the court of Charlemagne, which quickly spread across Europe. The advantage of the minuscule over majuscule was improved, faster readability.[citation needed]

In Latin, papyri from Herculaneum dating before 79 CE (when it was destroyed) have been found that have been written in old Roman cursive, where the early forms of minuscule letters "d", "h" and "r", for example, can already be recognised. According to papyrologist Knut Kleve, "The theory, then, that the lower-case letters have been developed from the fifth century uncials and the ninth century Carolingian minuscules seems to be wrong."[34] Both majuscule and minuscule letters existed, but the difference between the two variants was initially stylistic rather than orthographic and the writing system was still basically unicameral: a given handwritten document could use either one style or the other but these were not mixed. European languages, except for Ancient Greek and Latin, did not make the case distinction before about 1300.[citation needed]

The timeline of writing in Western Europe can be divided into four eras:[citation needed]

  • Greek majuscule (9th–3rd century BCE) in contrast to the Greek uncial script (3rd century BCE – 12th century CE) and the later Greek minuscule
  • Roman majuscule (7th century BCE – 4th century CE) in contrast to the Roman uncial (4th–8th century CE), Roman half uncial, and minuscule
  • Carolingian majuscule (4th–8th century CE) in contrast to the Carolingian minuscule (around 780 – 12th century)
  • Gothic majuscule (13th and 14th century), in contrast to the early Gothic (end of 11th to 13th century), Gothic (14th century), and late Gothic (16th century) minuscules.

Traditionally, certain letters were rendered differently according to a set of rules. In particular, those letters that began sentences or nouns were made larger and often written in a distinct script. There was no fixed capitalisation system until the early 18th century. The English language eventually dropped the rule for nouns, while the German language keeps it.

Similar developments have taken place in other alphabets. The lower-case script for the Greek alphabet has its origins in the 7th century and acquired its quadrilinear form (that is, characterised by ascenders and descenders[35]) in the 8th century. Over time, uncial letter forms were increasingly mixed into the script. The earliest dated Greek lower-case text is the Uspenski Gospels (MS 461) in the year 835.[36] The modern practice of capitalising the first letter of every sentence seems to be imported (and is rarely used when printing Ancient Greek materials even today).[citation needed]

 
Simplified relationship between various scripts leading to the development of modern lower case of standard Latin alphabet and that of the modern variants Fraktur (used in Germany until 1940s) and Gaelic (used in Ireland). Several scripts coexisted such as half-uncial and uncial, which derive from Roman cursive and Greek uncial, and Visigothic, Merovingian (Luxeuil variant here) and Beneventan. The Carolingian script was the basis for blackletter and humanist minuscule. What is commonly called "Gothic writing" is technically called blackletter (here textualis quadrata) and is completely unrelated to Visigothic script. The letter j is i with a flourish, u and v are the same letter in early scripts and were used depending on their position in insular half-uncial and caroline minuscule and later scripts, w is a ligature of vv, in insular the rune wynn is used as a w (three other runes in use were the thorn (þ), ʻféʼ (ᚠ) as an abbreviation for cattle/goods and maðr (ᛘ) for man). The letters y and z were very rarely used, in particular þ was written identically to y so y was dotted to avoid confusion, the dot was adopted for i only after late-caroline (protogothic), in beneventan script the macron abbreviation featured a dot above. Lost variants such as r rotunda, ligatures and scribal abbreviation marks are omitted; long s is shown when no terminal s (the only variant used today) is preserved from a given script. Humanist script was the basis for Venetian types which changed little until today, such as Times New Roman (a serifed typeface).

Type cases

The individual type blocks used in hand typesetting are stored in shallow wooden or metal drawers known as "type cases". Each is subdivided into a number of compartments ("boxes") for the storage of different individual letters.[citation needed]

The Oxford Universal Dictionary on Historical Advanced Proportional Principles (reprinted 1952) indicates that case in this sense (referring to the box or frame used by a compositor in the printing trade) was first used in English in 1588. Originally one large case was used for each typeface, then "divided cases", pairs of cases for majuscules and minuscules, were introduced in the region of today's Belgium by 1563, England by 1588, and France before 1723.

The terms upper and lower case originate from this division. By convention, when the two cases were taken out of the storage rack and placed on a rack on the compositor's desk, the case containing the capitals and small capitals stood at a steeper angle at the back of the desk, with the case for the small letters, punctuation, and spaces being more easily reached at a shallower angle below it to the front of the desk, hence upper and lower case.[37]

Though pairs of cases were used in English-speaking countries and many European countries in the seventeenth century, in Germany and Scandinavia the single case continued in use.[37]

Various patterns of cases are available, often with the compartments for lower-case letters varying in size according to the frequency of use of letters, so that the commonest letters are grouped together in larger boxes at the centre of the case.[37] The compositor takes the letter blocks from the compartments and places them in a composing stick, working from left to right and placing the letters upside down with the nick to the top, then sets the assembled type in a galley.[37]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In Roman Antiqua or other vertical fonts, the defunct long s (ſ) would have been an ascender; however, in italics, it would have been one of only two letters in the English alphabet (and most other Latin-script alphabets) with both an ascender and a descender, the other being f.[6]

References

  1. ^ "The School's Manual of Style". Johns Hopkins, Bloomberg School of Public Health. Retrieved 9 November 2018.
  2. ^ Hansard, Thomas Curson (1825). Typographia, an Historical Sketch of the Origin and Progress of the Art of Printing. pp. 408, 4806. Retrieved 12 August 2015.
  3. ^ Marc Drogin (1980). Medieval Calligraphy: Its History and Technique. Courier Corporation. p. 37. ISBN 9780486261423.
  4. ^ Charlton T. Lewis (1890). "Minusculus". An Elementary Latin Dictionary. New York, Cincinnati, and Chicago: American Book Company.
  5. ^ The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language (4th ed.). Boston and New York: Houghton Mifflin. 2000. ISBN 978-0-395-82517-4.
  6. ^ Nesbitt, Alexander (1957). The History and Technique of Lettering (1st ed.). New York City: Dover Publications. ISBN 0-486-20427-8.
  7. ^ Březina, David (2012). "Challenges in multilingual type design": 14 – via University of Reading Department of Typography and Design. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  8. ^ a b Dennis Oliver. "Using Capital Letters (#1)". Dave's ESL Cafe. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  9. ^ Nancy Edmonds Hanson (25 August 2008). "AP Style: Courtesy and Professional Titles". Minnesota State University. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  10. ^ "Capitalizing Titles of People". English Plus. 1997–2006. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  11. ^ "Capitalization". The Chicago Manual of Style Online. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  12. ^ "Citing Sources: Capitalization and Personal Names in Foreign Languages". Waidner-Spahr Library. Dickinson. Retrieved 30 March 2017.
  13. ^ Cf. Güthert, Kerstin (2017), PRESSEMITTEILUNG 29.6.2017 Amtliches Regelwerk der deutschen Rechtschreibung aktualisiert (PDF), Council for German Orthography, p. 1, retrieved 2017-06-29.
  14. ^ "Ijsland / IJsland". Taalunie. Retrieved 9 March 2014.
  15. ^ "Latin Extended-B" (PDF). Unicode. U+01C4, U+01C5, U+01C6, U+01C7, U+01C8, U+01C9, U+01CA, U+01CB, U+01CC. Retrieved 5 February 2017.
  16. ^ "Why I Spell it Hawai'i and not Hawaii, and Why You Should, Too". Blond Voyage. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  17. ^ "Hawaiian Language Online". The University of Hawai‘i. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  18. ^ "Spacing Modifier Letters" (PDF). Unicode. U+02BB. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  19. ^ "'Ōlelo Hawai'i on the WWW: A.K.A., How To Give Good 'Okina". KeolaDonaghy.com. Retrieved 6 August 2017.
  20. ^ RFC 1855 "Netiquette Guidelines"
  21. ^ "Registered features – definitions and implementations". OpenType Layout tag registry. Microsoft. Tag:'pcap', Tag: 'smcp'. Retrieved 24 March 2017.
  22. ^ Budel, Robin (14 February 2013). . More Than Eye Candy. Archived from the original on 14 February 2015. Retrieved 17 February 2021.
  23. ^ "The Guardian and Observer Style Guide". TheGuardian.com. Retrieved 10 June 2014.
  24. ^ R. M. Ritter, ed. (2002). Oxford Manual of Style. Oxford University Press.
  25. ^ Currin Berdine. "What to Capitalize in a Title". AdminSecret. Retrieved 23 February 2014.
  26. ^ a b c Bureau International des Poids et Mesures (2006). "The International System of Units" (PDF). Organisation Intergouvernementale de la Convention du Mètre. pp. 121, 130–131. Retrieved 12 January 2014.
  27. ^ "Letterlike symbols". Charts (Beta). Unicode Consortium. Retrieved 28 July 2017.
  28. ^ "History around Pascal Casing and Camel Casing".
  29. ^ "Caml programming guidelines". caml.inria.fr. Retrieved 2017-03-31.
  30. ^ "Ruby Style Guide". GitHub. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  31. ^ "Character Properties, Case Mappings & Names FAQ". Unicode. Retrieved 19 February 2017.
  32. ^ "Unicode Technical Note #26: On the Encoding of Latin, Greek, Cyrillic, and Han". Retrieved 23 April 2007.
  33. ^ David Harris (2003). The Calligrapher's Bible. Hauppauge, NY: Barron's. ISBN 0-7641-5615-2.
  34. ^ Knut Kleve (1994). "The Latin Papyri in Herculaneum". Proceedings of the 20th International Congress of Papyrologists, Copenhagen, 23–29 August 1992. Copenhagen: Museum Tusculanum Press.
  35. ^ "Roman Writing Systems – Medieval Manuscripts". Retrieved 2019-07-03.
  36. ^ The earliest known biblical manuscript is a palimpsest of Isajah in Syriac, written in 459/460. Bruce M. Metzger & Bart D. Ehrman, The Text of the New Testament (Oxford University Press: 2005), p. 92.
  37. ^ a b c d David Bolton (1997). . The Alembic Press. Archived from the original on 16 July 2007. Retrieved 23 April 2007.

Further reading

  • Hamilton, Frederick W. (1918). Capitals: A Primer of Information About Capitalization with Some Practical Typographic Hints as to the Use of Capitals – via Project Gutenberg.

letter, case, several, terms, redirect, here, other, uses, lowercase, music, capital, letters, song, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, cha. Several terms redirect here For other uses see Lowercase music and Capital Letters song This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Letter case news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2008 Learn how and when to remove this template message Letter case is the distinction between the letters that are in larger uppercase or capitals or more formally majuscule and smaller lowercase or more formally minuscule in the written representation of certain languages The writing systems that distinguish between the upper and lowercase have two parallel sets of letters with each letter in one set usually having an equivalent in the other set The two case variants are alternative representations of the same letter they have the same name and pronunciation and are treated identically when sorting in alphabetical order The lower case a and upper case A are the two case variants of the first letter in the English alphabet Letter case is generally applied in a mixed case fashion with both upper and lowercase letters appearing in a given piece of text for legibility The choice of case is often prescribed by the grammar of a language or by the conventions of a particular discipline In orthography the uppercase is primarily reserved for special purposes such as the first letter of a sentence or of a proper noun called capitalisation or capitalised words which makes the lowercase the more common variant in regular text In some contexts e g academical it is conventional to use one case only For example engineering design drawings are typically labelled entirely in uppercase letters which are easier to distinguish individually than the lowercase when space restrictions require that the lettering be very small In mathematics on the other hand letter case may indicate the relationship between mathematical objects with uppercase letters often representing superior objects e g X could be a mathematical set containing the generic member x Contents 1 Terminology 2 Typographical considerations 3 Bicameral script 3 1 Capitalisation 3 2 Exceptional letters and digraphs 3 3 Related phenomena 4 Stylistic or specialised usage 4 1 Headings and publication titles 4 2 Multi word proper nouns 4 3 Unit symbols and prefixes in the metric system 4 4 Use within programming languages 4 4 1 Camel case 4 4 2 Snake case 4 4 3 Kebab case 4 5 Studly caps 5 Case folding and case conversion 5 1 Unicode case folding and script identification 5 2 Methods in word processing 5 3 Methods in programming 6 History 6 1 Type cases 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further readingTerminology Edit Divided upper and lower type cases with cast metal sorts Layout for type cases The terms upper case and lower case may be written as two consecutive words connected with a hyphen upper case and lower case particularly if they pre modify another noun 1 or as a single word uppercase and lowercase These terms originated from the common layouts of the shallow drawers called type cases used to hold the movable type for letterpress printing Traditionally the capital letters were stored in a separate shallow tray or case that was located above the case that held the small letters 2 3 Majuscule ˈ m ae dʒ e s k juː l less commonly m e ˈ dʒ ʌ s k juː l for palaeographers is technically any script whose letters have very few or very short ascenders and descenders or none at all for example the majuscule scripts used in the Codex Vaticanus Graecus 1209 or the Book of Kells By virtue of their visual impact this made the term majuscule an apt descriptor for what much later came to be more commonly referred to as uppercase letters Minuscule redirects here For other uses see Minuscule disambiguation Minuscule refers to lower case letters The word is often spelled miniscule by association with the unrelated word miniature and the prefix mini This has traditionally been regarded as a spelling mistake since minuscule is derived from the word minus 4 but is now so common that some dictionaries tend to accept it as a nonstandard or variant spelling 5 Miniscule is still less likely however to be used in reference to lower case letters Typographical considerations EditThe glyphs of lowercase letters can resemble smaller forms of the uppercase glyphs restricted to the base band e g C c and S s cf small caps or can look hardly related e g D d and G g Here is a comparison of the upper and lower case variants of each letter included in the English alphabet the exact representation will vary according to the typeface and font used Uppercase A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y ZLowercase a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z Some lowercase letters have variations e g a ɑ Typographically the basic difference between the majuscules and minuscules is not that the majuscules are big and minuscules small but that the majuscules generally have the same height although depending on the typeface there may be some exceptions particularly with Q and sometimes J having a descending element also various diacritics can add to the normal height of a letter Ascenders as in h and descenders as in p make the height of lower case letters vary There is more variation in the height of the minuscules as some of them have parts higher ascenders or lower descenders than the typical size Normally b d f h k l t note 1 are the letters with ascenders and g j p q y are the ones with descenders In addition with old style numerals still used by some traditional or classical fonts 6 and 8 make up the ascender set and 3 4 5 7 and 9 the descender set Bicameral script EditThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Handwritten Cyrillic script Adyghe Latin alphabet used between 1927 and 1938 was based on Latin script but did not have capital letters being unicameral small caps include ᴀ ʙ ᴣ ʀ ⱪ ᴘ and A minority of writing systems use two separate cases Such writing systems are called bicameral scripts Languages that use the Latin Cyrillic Greek Coptic Armenian Adlam Warang Citi Cherokee Garay Zaghawa and Osage scripts use letter cases in their written form as an aid to clarity Another bicameral script which is not used for any modern languages is Deseret The Georgian alphabet has several variants and there were attempts to use them as different cases but the modern written Georgian language does not distinguish case 7 All other writing systems make no distinction between majuscules and minuscules a system called unicameral script or unicase This includes most syllabic and other non alphabetic scripts In scripts with a case distinction lower case is generally used for the majority of text capitals are used for capitalisation and emphasis when bold is not available Acronyms and particularly initialisms are often written in all caps depending on various factors Capitalisation Edit Main article Capitalisation Capitalisation is the writing of a word with its first letter in uppercase and the remaining letters in lowercase Capitalisation rules vary by language and are often quite complex but in most modern languages that have capitalisation the first word of every sentence is capitalised as are all proper nouns citation needed Capitalisation in English in terms of the general orthographic rules independent of context e g title vs heading vs text is universally standardised for formal writing Capital letters are used as the first letter of a sentence a proper noun or a proper adjective The names of the days of the week and the names of the months are also capitalised as are the first person pronoun I 8 and the vocative particle O There are a few pairs of words of different meanings whose only difference is capitalisation of the first letter Honorifics and personal titles showing rank or prestige are capitalised when used together with the name of the person for example Mr Smith Bishop O Brien Professor Moore or as a direct address but normally not when used alone and in a more general sense 9 10 It can also be seen as customary to capitalise any word in some contexts even a pronoun 11 referring to the deity of a monotheistic religion Other words normally start with a lower case letter There are however situations where further capitalisation may be used to give added emphasis for example in headings and publication titles see below In some traditional forms of poetry capitalisation has conventionally been used as a marker to indicate the beginning of a line of verse independent of any grammatical feature In political writing parody and satire the unexpected emphasis afforded by otherwise ill advised capitalisation is often used to great stylistic effect such as in the case of George Orwell s Big Brother Other languages vary in their use of capitals For example in German all nouns are capitalised this was previously common in English as well mainly in the 17th and 18th centuries while in Romance and most other European languages the names of the days of the week the names of the months and adjectives of nationality religion and so on normally begin with a lower case letter 12 On the other hand in some languages it is customary to capitalise formal polite pronouns for example De Dem Danish Sie Ihnen German and Vd or Ud short for usted in Spanish Informal communication such as texting instant messaging or a handwritten sticky note may not bother to follow the conventions concerning capitalisation but that is because its users usually do not expect it to be formal 8 Exceptional letters and digraphs Edit The German letter ss formerly existed only in lower case The orthographical capitalisation does not concern ss which generally does not occur at the beginning of a word and in the all caps style it has traditionally been replaced by the digraph SS Since June 2017 however capital ẞ is accepted as an alternative in the all caps style 13 The Greek upper case letter S has two different lower case forms s in word final position and s elsewhere In a similar manner the Latin upper case letter S used to have two different lower case forms s in word final position and ſ elsewhere The latter form called the long s fell out of general use before the middle of the 19th century except for the countries that continued to use blackletter typefaces such as Fraktur When blackletter type fell out of general use in the mid 20th century even those countries dropped the long s citation needed The treatment of the Greek iota subscript with upper case letters is complicated Unlike most languages that use Latin script and link the dotless upper case I with the dotted lower case i Turkish as well as some forms of Azeri have both a dotted and dotless I each in both upper and lower case Each of the two pairs I i and I i represents a distinctive phoneme In some languages specific digraphs may be regarded as single letters and in Dutch the digraph IJ ij is even capitalised with both components written in uppercase for example IJsland rather than Ijsland 14 In other languages such as Welsh and Hungarian various digraphs are regarded as single letters for collation purposes but the second component of the digraph will still be written in lower case even if the first component is capitalised Similarly in South Slavic languages whose orthography is coordinated between the Cyrillic and Latin scripts the Latin digraphs Lj lj Nj nj and Dž dž are each regarded as a single letter like their Cyrillic equivalents Љ љ Њ њ and Џ џ respectively but only in all caps style should both components be in upper case e g Ljiljan LJILJAN Njonja NJONJA Džidža DŽIDŽA citation needed Unicode designates a single character for each case variant i e upper case title case and lower case of the three digraphs 15 Some English surnames such as fforbes are traditionally spelt with a digraph instead of a capital letter at least for ff This indicates a long and prestigious family tradition citation needed In the Hawaiian orthography the ʻokina is a phonemic symbol that visually resembles a left single quotation mark Representing the glottal stop the ʻokina can be characterised as either a letter 16 or a diacritic 17 As a unicase letter the ʻokina is unaffected by capitalisation it is the following letter that is capitalised instead According to the Unicode standard the ʻokina is formally encoded as U 02BB ʻ MODIFIER LETTER TURNED COMMA 18 but it is not uncommon to substitute this with a similar punctuation character such as the left single quotation mark or an apostrophe 19 Related phenomena Edit Similar orthographic and graphostylistic conventions are used for emphasis or following language specific or other rules including Font effects such as italic type or oblique type boldface and choice of serif vs sans serif Typographical conventions in mathematical formulae include the use of Greek letters and the use of Latin letters with special formatting such as blackboard bold and blackletter Some letters of the Arabic and Hebrew alphabets and some jamo of the Korean hangul have different forms depending on placement within a word but these rules are strict and the different forms cannot be used for emphasis In the Arabic and Arabic based alphabets letters in a word are connected except for several that cannot connect to the following letter Letters may have distinct forms depending on whether they are initial connected only to the following letter medial connected to both neighboring letters final connected only to the preceding letter or isolated connected to neither a preceding nor a following letter In the Hebrew alphabet five letters have a distinct form see Final form that is used when they are word final In Georgian some authors use isolated letters from the ancient Asomtavruli alphabet within a text otherwise written in the modern Mkhedruli in a fashion that is reminiscent of the usage of upper case letters in the Latin Greek and Cyrillic alphabets In the Japanese writing system an author has the option of switching between kanji hiragana katakana and rōmaji In particular every hiragana character has an equivalent katakana character and vice versa Romanised Japanese sometimes uses lowercase letters to represent words that would be written in hiragana and uppercase letters to represent words that would be written in katakana Some kana characters are written in smaller type when they modify or combine with the preceding sign yōon or the following sign sokuon Stylistic or specialised usage EditThe examples and perspective in this section deal primarily with the English speaking world and do not represent a worldwide view of the subject You may improve this section discuss the issue on the talk page or create a new section as appropriate September 2013 Learn how and when to remove this template message Alternating all caps and headline styles at the start of a New York Times report published in November 1919 The event reported is Arthur Eddington s test of Einstein s theory of general relativity In English a variety of case styles are used in various circumstances Sentence case The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog A mixed case style in which the first word of the sentence is capitalised as well as proper nouns and other words as required by a more specific rule This is generally equivalent to the baseline universal standard of formal English orthography In computer programming the initial capital is easier to automate than the other rules For example on English language Wikipedia the first character in page titles is capitalised by default Because the other rules are more complex substrings for concatenation into sentences are commonly written in mid sentence case applying all the rules of sentence case except the initial capital Title case capital case headline style The Quick Brown Fox Jumps over the Lazy Dog A mixed case style with all words capitalised except for certain subsets particularly articles and short prepositions and conjunctions defined by rules that are not universally standardised The standardisation is only at the level of house styles and individual style manuals See further explanation below at Headings and publication titles Start case First letter of each word capitalized The Quick Brown Fox Jumps Over The Lazy Dog Start case or initial caps is a simplified variant of title case In text processing title case usually involves the capitalisation of all words irrespective of their part of speech All caps all uppercase THE QUICK BROWN FOX JUMPS OVER THE LAZY DOG A unicase style with capital letters only This can be used in headings and special situations such as for typographical emphasis in text made on a typewriter With the advent of the Internet the all caps style is more often used for emphasis however it is considered poor netiquette by some to type in all capitals and said to be tantamount to shouting 20 Long spans of Latin alphabet text in all upper case are more difficult to read because of the absence of the ascenders and descenders found in lower case letters which aids recognition and legibility In some cultures it is common to write family names in all caps to distinguish them from the given names especially in identity documents such as passports Small caps The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog Similar in form to capital letters but roughly the size of a lower case x small caps can be used instead of lower case letters and combined with regular caps in a mixed case fashion This is a feature of certain fonts such as Copperplate Gothic According to various typographical traditions the height of small caps can be equal to or slightly larger than the x height of the typeface the smaller variant is sometimes called petite caps and may also be mixed with the larger variant 21 Small caps can be used for acronyms names mathematical entities computer commands in printed text business or personal printed stationery letterheads and other situations where a given phrase needs to be distinguished from the main text All lowercase the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog Steve Jobs s signature as seen on the inner side of the original Macintosh using lower case cursive A unicase style with no capital letters This is sometimes used for artistic effect such as in poetry Also commonly seen in computer languages and in informal electronic communications such as SMS language and instant messaging avoiding the shift key to type more quickly Apple co founder Steve Jobs used all lowercase in cursive in his signature 22 A comparison of various case styles from most to least capitals used Case style Example DescriptionAll caps THE VITAMINS ARE IN MY FRESH CALIFORNIA RAISINS All letters uppercaseStart case The Vitamins Are In My Fresh California Raisins All words capitalised regardless of functionTitle case The Vitamins Are in My Fresh California Raisins The first word and all other words capitalised except for articles and short prepositions and conjunctionsGerman style sentence case The Vitamins are in my fresh California Raisins The first word and all nouns capitalisedSentence case The vitamins are in my fresh California raisins The first word proper nouns and some specified words capitalisedMid sentence case the vitamins are in my fresh California raisins As above but excepting special treatment of the first wordAll lowercase the vitamins are in my fresh california raisins All letters lowercase unconventional in English prose Headings and publication titles Edit In English language publications various conventions are used for the capitalisation of words in publication titles and headlines including chapter and section headings The rules differ substantially between individual house styles The convention followed by many British publishers including scientific publishers like Nature and New Scientist magazines like The Economist and newspapers like The Guardian and The Times and many U S newspapers is sentence style capitalisation in headlines i e capitalisation follows the same rules that apply for sentences This convention is usually called sentence case It may also be applied to publication titles especially in bibliographic references and library catalogues An example of a global publisher whose English language house style prescribes sentence case titles and headings is the International Organization for Standardization ISO For publication titles it is however a common typographic practice among both British 23 and U S publishers to capitalise significant words and in the United States this is often applied to headings too This family of typographic conventions is usually called title case For example R M Ritter s Oxford Manual of Style 2002 suggests capitalising the first word and all nouns pronouns adjectives verbs and adverbs but generally not articles conjunctions and short prepositions 24 This is an old form of emphasis similar to the more modern practice of using a larger or boldface font for titles The rules which prescribe which words to capitalise are not based on any grammatically inherent correct incorrect distinction and are not universally standardised they differ between style guides although most style guides tend to follow a few strong conventions as follows Most styles capitalise all words except for short closed class words certain parts of speech namely articles prepositions and conjunctions but the first word always and last word in many styles are also capitalised regardless of their part of speech Many styles capitalise longer prepositions such as between and throughout but not shorter ones such as for and with 25 Typically a preposition is considered short if it has up to three or four letters A few styles capitalise all words in title case the so called start case which has the advantage of being easy to implement and hard to get wrong that is not edited to style Because of this rule s simplicity software case folding routines can handle 95 or more of the editing especially if they are programmed for desired exceptions such as FBI rather than Fbi As for whether hyphenated words are capitalised not only at the beginning but also after the hyphen there is no universal standard variation occurs in the wild and among house styles e g The Letter Case Rule in My Book Short term Follow up Care for Burns Traditional copyediting makes a distinction between temporary compounds such as many nonce novel instance compound modifiers in which every part of the hyphenated word is capitalised e g How This Particular Author Chose to Style His Autumn Apple Picking Heading and permanent compounds which are terms that although compound and hyphenated are so well established that dictionaries enter them as headwords e g Short term Follow up Care for Burns Title case is widely used in many English language publications especially in the United States However its conventions are sometimes not followed strictly especially in informal writing In creative typography such as music record covers and other artistic material all styles are commonly encountered including all lowercase letters and special case styles such as studly caps see below For example in the wordmarks of video games it is not uncommon to use stylised upper case letters at the beginning and end of a title with the intermediate letters in small caps or lower case e g ArcaniA ArmA and DmC Multi word proper nouns Edit Single word proper nouns are capitalised in formal written English unless the name is intentionally stylised to break this rule such as the first or last name of danah boyd Multi word proper nouns include names of organisations publications and people Often the rules for title case described in the previous section are applied to these names so that non initial articles conjunctions and short prepositions are lowercase and all other words are uppercase For example the short preposition of and the article the are lowercase in Steering Committee of the Finance Department Usually only capitalised words are used to form an acronym variant of the name though there is some variation in this With personal names this practice can vary sometimes all words are capitalised regardless of length or function but is not limited to English names Examples include the English names Tamar of Georgia and Catherine the Great van and der in Dutch names von and zu in German de los and y in Spanish names de or d in French names and ibn in Arabic names Some surname prefixes also affect the capitalisation of the following internal letter or word for example Mac in Celtic names and Al in Arabic names Unit symbols and prefixes in the metric system Edit Of the seven SI base unit symbols A ampere for electric current and K kelvin for temperature both named after people are always written in upper case whereas s second for time m metre for length kg kilogram for mass cd candela for luminous intensity and mol mole for amount of substance are written in lower case In the International System of Units SI a letter usually has different meanings in upper and lower case when used as a unit symbol Generally unit symbols are written in lower case but if the name of the unit is derived from a proper noun the first letter of the symbol is capitalised Nevertheless the name of the unit if spelled out is always considered a common noun and written accordingly in lower case 26 For example 1 s one second when used for the base unit of time 1 S one siemens when used for the unit of electric conductance and admittance named after Werner von Siemens 1 Sv one sievert used for the unit of ionising radiation dose named after Rolf Maximilian Sievert For the purpose of clarity the symbol for litre can optionally be written in upper case even though the name is not derived from a proper noun 26 For example one litre may be written as 1 l the original form for typefaces in which digit one 1 lower case ell l and upper case i I look different 1 L an alternative form for typefaces in which these characters are difficult to distinguish or the typeface the reader will be using is unknown A script l in various typefaces e g 1 l has traditionally been used in some countries to prevent confusion however the separate Unicode character which represents this U 2113 ℓ SCRIPT SMALL L is deprecated by the SI 27 Another solution sometimes seen in Web typography is to use a serif font for lower case ell in otherwise sans serif material 1 l The letter case of a prefix symbol is determined independently of the unit symbol to which it is attached Lower case is used for all submultiple prefix symbols and the small multiple prefix symbols up to k for kilo meaning 103 1000 multiplier whereas upper case is used for larger multipliers 26 1 ms millisecond a small measure of time m for milli meaning 10 3 1 1000 multiplier 1 Ms megasecond a large measure of time M for mega meaning 106 1 000 000 multiplier 1 mS millisiemens a small measure of electric conductance 1 MS megasiemens a large measure of electric conductance 1 mm millimetre a small measure of length 1 Mm megametre a large measure of length Use within programming languages Edit See also Naming convention programming Multiple word identifiers Some case styles are not used in standard English but are common in computer programming product branding or other specialised fields The usage derives from how programming languages are parsed programmatically They generally separate their syntactic tokens by simple whitespace including space characters tabs and newlines When the tokens such as function and variable names start to multiply in complex software development and there is still a need to keep the source code human readable Naming conventions make this possible So for example a function dealing with matrix multiplication might formally be called SGEMM with the asterisk standing in for an equally inscrutable list of 13 parameters in BLAS MultiplyMatrixByMatrix Matrix x Matrix y in some hypothetical higher level manifestly typed language broadly following the syntax of C or Java multiply matrix by matrix x y in something derived from LISP or perhaps multiply x y in the CLOS or some newer derivative language supporting type inference and multiple dispatch In each case the capitalisation or lack thereof supports a different function In the first FORTRAN compatibility requires case insensitive naming and short function names The second supports easily discernible function and argument names and types within the context of an imperative strongly typed language The third supports the macro facilities of LISP and its tendency to view programs and data minimalistically and as interchangeable The fourth idiom needs much less syntactic sugar overall because much of the semantics are implied but because of its brevity and so lack of the need for capitalization or multipart words at all might also make the code too abstract and overloaded for the common programmer to understand Understandably then such coding conventions are highly subjective and can lead to rather opinionated debate such as in the case of editor wars or those about indent style Capitalisation is no exception Camel case Edit Camel case theQuickBrownFoxJumpsOverTheLazyDog or TheQuickBrownFoxJumpsOverTheLazyDog Spaces and punctuation are removed and the first letter of each word is capitalised If this includes the first letter of the first word CamelCase PowerPoint TheQuick etc the case is sometimes called upper camel case or illustratively CamelCase Pascal case in reference to the Pascal programming language 28 or bumpy case When the first letter of the first word is lowercase iPod eBay theQuickBrownFox the case is usually known as lower camel case or dromedary case illustratively dromedaryCase This format has become popular in the branding of information technology products and services with an initial i meaning Internet or intelligent citation needed as in iPod or an initial e meaning electronic as in email electronic mail or e commerce electronic commerce Snake case Edit Snake case the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog Punctuation is removed and spaces are replaced by single underscores Normally the letters share the same case e g UPPER CASE EMBEDDED UNDERSCORE or lower case embedded underscore but the case can be mixed as in OCaml modules 29 The style may also be called pothole case especially in Python programming in which this convention is often used for naming variables Illustratively it may be rendered snake case pothole case etc When all upper case it may be referred to as screaming snake case or SCREAMING SNAKE CASE or hazard case 30 Kebab case Edit Kebab case the quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog Similar to snake case above except hyphens rather than underscores are used to replace spaces It is also known as spinal case param case Lisp case in reference to the Lisp programming language or dash case or illustratively as kebab case If every word is capitalised the style is known as train case TRAIN CASE citation needed In CSS all property names and most keyword values are primarily formatted in kebab case Studly caps Edit Studly caps e g tHeqUicKBrOWnFoXJUmpsoVeRThElAzydOG Mixed case with no semantic or syntactic significance to the use of the capitals Sometimes only vowels are upper case at other times upper and lower case are alternated but often it is simply random The name comes from the sarcastic or ironic implication that it was used in an attempt by the writer to convey their own coolness It is also used to mock the violation of standard English case conventions by marketers in the naming of computer software packages even when there is no technical requirement to do so e g Sun Microsystems naming of a windowing system NeWS Illustrative naming of the style is naturally random stUdlY cAps StUdLy CaPs etc Case folding and case conversion EditIn the character sets developed for computing each upper and lower case letter is encoded as a separate character In order to enable case folding and case conversion the software needs to link together the two characters representing the case variants of a letter Some old character encoding systems such as the Baudot code are restricted to one set of letters usually represented by the upper case variants Case insensitive operations can be said to fold case from the idea of folding the character code table so that upper and lower case letters coincide The conversion of letter case in a string is common practice in computer applications for instance to make case insensitive comparisons Many high level programming languages provide simple methods for case conversion at least for the ASCII character set Whether or not the case variants are treated as equivalent to each other varies depending on the computer system and context For example user passwords are generally case sensitive in order to allow more diversity and make them more difficult to break In contrast case is often ignored in keyword searches in order to ignore insignificant variations in keyword capitalisation both in queries and queried material Unicode case folding and script identification Edit Unicode defines case folding through the three case mapping properties of each character upper case lower case and title case in this context title case relates to ligatures and digraphs encoded as mixed case single characters in which the first component is in upper case and the second component in lower case 31 These properties relate all characters in scripts with differing cases to the other case variants of the character As briefly discussed in Unicode Technical Note 26 32 In terms of implementation issues any attempt at a unification of Latin Greek and Cyrillic would wreak havoc and make casing operations an unholy mess in effect making all casing operations context sensitive In other words while the shapes of letters like A B E H K M O P T X Y and so on are shared between the Latin Greek and Cyrillic alphabets and small differences in their canonical forms may be considered to be of a merely typographical nature it would still be problematic for a multilingual character set or a font to provide only a single code point for say uppercase letter B as this would make it quite difficult for a wordprocessor to change that single uppercase letter to one of the three different choices for the lower case letter the Latin b U 0062 Greek b U 03B2 or Cyrillic v U 0432 Therefore the corresponding Latin Greek and Cyrillic upper case letters U 0042 U 0392 and U 0412 respectively are also encoded as separate characters despite their appearance being basically identical Without letter case a unified European alphabet such as ABBCGDDEYeZFFGHIIJ Z with an appropriate subset for each language is feasible but considering letter case it becomes very clear that these alphabets are rather distinct sets of symbols Methods in word processing Edit Most modern word processors provide automated case conversion with a simple click or keystroke For example in Microsoft Office Word there is a dialog box for toggling the selected text through UPPERCASE then lowercase then Title Case actually start caps exception words must be lowercased individually The keystroke Shift F3 does the same thing Methods in programming Edit In some forms of BASIC there are two methods for case conversion UpperA UCASE a LowerA LCASE A C and C as well as any C like language that conforms to its standard library provide these functions in the file ctype h char upperA toupper a char lowerA tolower A Case conversion is different with different character sets In ASCII or EBCDIC case can be converted in the following way in C int toupper int c return islower c c a A c int tolower int c return isupper c c A a c This only works because the letters of upper and lower cases are spaced out equally In ASCII they are consecutive whereas with EBCDIC they are not nonetheless the upper case letters are arranged in the same pattern and with the same gaps as are the lower case letters so the technique still works Some computer programming languages offer facilities for converting text to a form in which all words are capitalised Visual Basic calls this proper case Python calls it title case This differs from usual title casing conventions such as the English convention in which minor words are not capitalised History EditSee also Initial Latin majuscule inscription on the Arch of Titus 82 CE Papyrus fragment with old Roman cursive script from the reign of Claudius 41 54 CE Example of Greek minuscule text Codex Ebnerianus c 1100 CE Combined case with capital letters above small letters Late 19th century mixed cases Demonstrating the use of a composing stick in front of divided upper and lower type cases at the International Printing Museum in Carson California United States North America Originally alphabets were written entirely in majuscule letters spaced between well defined upper and lower bounds When written quickly with a pen these tended to turn into rounder and much simpler forms It is from these that the first minuscule hands developed the half uncials and cursive minuscule which no longer stayed bound between a pair of lines 33 These in turn formed the foundations for the Carolingian minuscule script developed by Alcuin for use in the court of Charlemagne which quickly spread across Europe The advantage of the minuscule over majuscule was improved faster readability citation needed In Latin papyri from Herculaneum dating before 79 CE when it was destroyed have been found that have been written in old Roman cursive where the early forms of minuscule letters d h and r for example can already be recognised According to papyrologist Knut Kleve The theory then that the lower case letters have been developed from the fifth century uncials and the ninth century Carolingian minuscules seems to be wrong 34 Both majuscule and minuscule letters existed but the difference between the two variants was initially stylistic rather than orthographic and the writing system was still basically unicameral a given handwritten document could use either one style or the other but these were not mixed European languages except for Ancient Greek and Latin did not make the case distinction before about 1300 citation needed The timeline of writing in Western Europe can be divided into four eras citation needed Greek majuscule 9th 3rd century BCE in contrast to the Greek uncial script 3rd century BCE 12th century CE and the later Greek minuscule Roman majuscule 7th century BCE 4th century CE in contrast to the Roman uncial 4th 8th century CE Roman half uncial and minuscule Carolingian majuscule 4th 8th century CE in contrast to the Carolingian minuscule around 780 12th century Gothic majuscule 13th and 14th century in contrast to the early Gothic end of 11th to 13th century Gothic 14th century and late Gothic 16th century minuscules Traditionally certain letters were rendered differently according to a set of rules In particular those letters that began sentences or nouns were made larger and often written in a distinct script There was no fixed capitalisation system until the early 18th century The English language eventually dropped the rule for nouns while the German language keeps it Similar developments have taken place in other alphabets The lower case script for the Greek alphabet has its origins in the 7th century and acquired its quadrilinear form that is characterised by ascenders and descenders 35 in the 8th century Over time uncial letter forms were increasingly mixed into the script The earliest dated Greek lower case text is the Uspenski Gospels MS 461 in the year 835 36 The modern practice of capitalising the first letter of every sentence seems to be imported and is rarely used when printing Ancient Greek materials even today citation needed Simplified relationship between various scripts leading to the development of modern lower case of standard Latin alphabet and that of the modern variants Fraktur used in Germany until 1940s and Gaelic used in Ireland Several scripts coexisted such as half uncial and uncial which derive from Roman cursive and Greek uncial and Visigothic Merovingian Luxeuil variant here and Beneventan The Carolingian script was the basis for blackletter and humanist minuscule What is commonly called Gothic writing is technically called blackletter here textualis quadrata and is completely unrelated to Visigothic script The letter j is i with a flourish u and v are the same letter in early scripts and were used depending on their position in insular half uncial and caroline minuscule and later scripts w is a ligature of vv in insular the rune wynn is used as a w three other runes in use were the thorn th ʻfeʼ ᚠ as an abbreviation for cattle goods and madr ᛘ for man The letters y and z were very rarely used in particular th was written identically to y so y was dotted to avoid confusion the dot was adopted for i only after late caroline protogothic in beneventan script the macron abbreviation featured a dot above Lost variants such as r rotunda ligatures and scribal abbreviation marks are omitted long s is shown when no terminal s the only variant used today is preserved from a given script Humanist script was the basis for Venetian types which changed little until today such as Times New Roman a serifed typeface Type cases Edit The individual type blocks used in hand typesetting are stored in shallow wooden or metal drawers known as type cases Each is subdivided into a number of compartments boxes for the storage of different individual letters citation needed The Oxford Universal Dictionary on Historical Advanced Proportional Principles reprinted 1952 indicates that case in this sense referring to the box or frame used by a compositor in the printing trade was first used in English in 1588 Originally one large case was used for each typeface then divided cases pairs of cases for majuscules and minuscules were introduced in the region of today s Belgium by 1563 England by 1588 and France before 1723 The terms upper and lower case originate from this division By convention when the two cases were taken out of the storage rack and placed on a rack on the compositor s desk the case containing the capitals and small capitals stood at a steeper angle at the back of the desk with the case for the small letters punctuation and spaces being more easily reached at a shallower angle below it to the front of the desk hence upper and lower case 37 Though pairs of cases were used in English speaking countries and many European countries in the seventeenth century in Germany and Scandinavia the single case continued in use 37 Various patterns of cases are available often with the compartments for lower case letters varying in size according to the frequency of use of letters so that the commonest letters are grouped together in larger boxes at the centre of the case 37 The compositor takes the letter blocks from the compartments and places them in a composing stick working from left to right and placing the letters upside down with the nick to the top then sets the assembled type in a galley 37 See also EditAll caps Alternating caps Camel case Capitalization Capitalization in English Initial or drop cap Grammatical case Punctuation Roman cursive Roman square capitals Shift key Small caps Text figures UnicaseNotes Edit In Roman Antiqua or other vertical fonts the defunct long s ſ would have been an ascender however in italics it would have been one of only two letters in the English alphabet and most other Latin script alphabets with both an ascender and a descender the other being f 6 References Edit The School s Manual of Style Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Retrieved 9 November 2018 Hansard Thomas Curson 1825 Typographia an Historical Sketch of the Origin and Progress of the Art of Printing pp 408 4806 Retrieved 12 August 2015 Marc Drogin 1980 Medieval Calligraphy Its History and Technique Courier Corporation p 37 ISBN 9780486261423 Charlton T Lewis 1890 Minusculus An Elementary Latin Dictionary New York Cincinnati and Chicago American Book Company The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language 4th ed Boston and New York Houghton Mifflin 2000 ISBN 978 0 395 82517 4 Nesbitt Alexander 1957 The History and Technique of Lettering 1st ed New York City Dover Publications ISBN 0 486 20427 8 Brezina David 2012 Challenges in multilingual type design 14 via University of Reading Department of Typography and Design a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help a b Dennis Oliver Using Capital Letters 1 Dave s ESL Cafe Retrieved 19 February 2017 Nancy Edmonds Hanson 25 August 2008 AP Style Courtesy and Professional Titles Minnesota State University Retrieved 19 February 2017 Capitalizing Titles of People English Plus 1997 2006 Retrieved 19 February 2017 Capitalization The Chicago Manual of Style Online Retrieved 19 February 2017 Citing Sources Capitalization and Personal Names in Foreign Languages Waidner Spahr Library Dickinson Retrieved 30 March 2017 Cf Guthert Kerstin 2017 PRESSEMITTEILUNG 29 6 2017 Amtliches Regelwerk der deutschen Rechtschreibung aktualisiert PDF Council for German Orthography p 1 retrieved 2017 06 29 Ijsland IJsland Taalunie Retrieved 9 March 2014 Latin Extended B PDF Unicode U 01C4 U 01C5 U 01C6 U 01C7 U 01C8 U 01C9 U 01CA U 01CB U 01CC Retrieved 5 February 2017 Why I Spell it Hawai i and not Hawaii and Why You Should Too Blond Voyage Retrieved 6 August 2017 Hawaiian Language Online The University of Hawai i Retrieved 6 August 2017 Spacing Modifier Letters PDF Unicode U 02BB Retrieved 6 August 2017 Ōlelo Hawai i on the WWW A K A How To Give Good Okina KeolaDonaghy com Retrieved 6 August 2017 RFC 1855 Netiquette Guidelines Registered features definitions and implementations OpenType Layout tag registry Microsoft Tag pcap Tag smcp Retrieved 24 March 2017 Budel Robin 14 February 2013 lower case typography and steve jobs More Than Eye Candy Archived from the original on 14 February 2015 Retrieved 17 February 2021 The Guardian and Observer Style Guide TheGuardian com Retrieved 10 June 2014 R M Ritter ed 2002 Oxford Manual of Style Oxford University Press Currin Berdine What to Capitalize in a Title AdminSecret Retrieved 23 February 2014 a b c Bureau International des Poids et Mesures 2006 The International System of Units PDF Organisation Intergouvernementale de la Convention du Metre pp 121 130 131 Retrieved 12 January 2014 Letterlike symbols Charts Beta Unicode Consortium Retrieved 28 July 2017 History around Pascal Casing and Camel Casing Caml programming guidelines caml inria fr Retrieved 2017 03 31 Ruby Style Guide GitHub Retrieved 11 November 2013 Character Properties Case Mappings amp Names FAQ Unicode Retrieved 19 February 2017 Unicode Technical Note 26 On the Encoding of Latin Greek Cyrillic and Han Retrieved 23 April 2007 David Harris 2003 The Calligrapher s Bible Hauppauge NY Barron s ISBN 0 7641 5615 2 Knut Kleve 1994 The Latin Papyri in Herculaneum Proceedings of the 20th International Congress of Papyrologists Copenhagen 23 29 August 1992 Copenhagen Museum Tusculanum Press Roman Writing Systems Medieval Manuscripts Retrieved 2019 07 03 The earliest known biblical manuscript is a palimpsest of Isajah in Syriac written in 459 460 Bruce M Metzger amp Bart D Ehrman The Text of the New Testament Oxford University Press 2005 p 92 a b c d David Bolton 1997 Type Cases The Alembic Press Archived from the original on 16 July 2007 Retrieved 23 April 2007 Further reading Edit Look up capital letter lowercase minuscule or Appendix Capital letter in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Capital letters Hamilton Frederick W 1918 Capitals A Primer of Information About Capitalization with Some Practical Typographic Hints as to the Use of Capitals via Project Gutenberg Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Letter case amp oldid 1133001626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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