Let’s Learn English Together, Lesson Two
Last week I looked at capitalization of titles. This week I’m going to learn about capitalization in the body of writing.
The British Council on its Learning English Central website says, “the rules for capitalization are quite easy to remember,” and gives the following advice: (note, the lettering system is mine, to enable easier reading.)
A) “English sentences always begin with a capital letter.”
B) “The personal pronoun ‘I’ is always written with a capital letter, wherever in a sentence it comes.
C) “Apart from these cases, capital letters are used at the beginning of the following words:
Names of people and places
Peter, Susan, Australia, Hyde Park, the Middle East
Planets and stars can be considered as places
Jupiter, Pluto, Alpha Centauri
Titles
Mr Finnegan, Mrs Edgeware, Ms Johnson, Dr Jacobs, Major Fingleton, the Director General
Days, months, and public holidays
Monday, Friday, July, December, Christmas, Ramadan, Yom Kippur
Nationalities and regions, languages, religions and ethnic groups
a German car, the Scandinavian countries, she speaks Russian and Chinese, a Muslim cleric, the Aboriginal people
Titles of books, magazines, film, songs, etc.
War and Peace, Rolling Stone, the New Statesman, Citizen Kane, Stairway to Heaven, the Mouse Trap
Notice that articles, prepositions, conjunctions, etc. are not usually capitalized.”
Learn English is another online resource published by the British Council. Here they add, “We use capital letters when we talk about languages in school subjects –but other subjects don’t have a capital letter,
She’s got exams in English, French, history and geography this year.”
I think the British Council are giving us an over-simplified version of capitalization; several areas are not covered.
Jane Strauss, author of ‘The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation’ gave a fuller account on her reference list of things to capitalize. On Religion, she said, “Capitalize “religions and names of deities Note: Capitalize the Bible (but biblical). Do not capitalize heaven, hell, the devil, satanic”
She also gives us four rules to follow and an extensive reference list of when to use capital, and when not to. Her rules are below
“Rule 1. Capitalize the first word of a document and the first word after a period.
“Rule 2. Capitalize proper nouns—and adjectives derived from proper nouns.
“Examples: the Golden Gate Bridge the Grand Canyon a Russian song a Shakespearean sonnet a Freudian slip
“With the passage of time, some words originally derived from proper nouns have taken on a life, and authority, of their own and no longer require capitalization.
“Examples: herculean (from the ancient-Greek hero Hercules) quixotic (from the hero of the classic novel Don Quixote) draconian (from ancient-Athenian lawgiver Draco)
“The main function of capitals is to focus attention on particular elements within any group of people, places, or things. We can speak of a lake in the middle of the country, or we can be more specific and say Lake Michigan, which distinguishes it from every other lake on earth.
“Rule 3. A thorny aspect of capitalization: where does it stop? When does the Iraq war become the Iraq War? Why is the legendary Hope Diamond not the Hope diamond? Everyone writes New York City, so why does the Associated Press Stylebook recommend New York state? There aren’t always easy formulas or logical explanations. Research with reference books and search engines is the best strategy.
“In the case of brand names, companies are of little help, because they capitalize any word that applies to their merchandise. Domino’s Pizza or Domino’s pizza? Is it Ivory Soap or Ivory soap, a Hilton Hotel or a Hilton hotel? Most writers don’t capitalize common nouns that simply describe the products (pizza, soap, hotel), but it’s not always easy to determine where a brand name ends. There is Time magazine but also the New York Times Magazine. No one would argue with Coca-Cola or Pepsi Cola, but a case could be made for Royal Crown cola.
“If a trademark starts with a lowercase word or letter (e.g., eBay, iPhone), many authorities advise capitalizing it to begin a sentence.
“Example: EBay opened strong in trading today.
“Rule 4. Capitalize titles when they are used before names, unless the title is followed by a comma. Do not capitalize the title if it is used after a name or instead of a name.
“Examples: The president will address Congress. Chairman of the Board William Bly will preside at the conference. The chairman of the board, William Bly, will preside. The senators from Iowa and Ohio are expected to attend. Also expected to attend are Senators Buzz James and Eddie Twain. The governors, lieutenant governors, and attorneys general called for a special task force. Governor Fortinbrass, Lieutenant Governor Poppins, and Attorney General Dalloway will attend.”
For Jane Strauss’s comprehensive capital usage list see https://www.grammarbook.com/punctuation/capital.asp it’s well worth a look.
The Cambridge Guide to English Usage states “British writers and editors are more inclined to use capital letters where Americans would dispense with them”. Bearing that in mind and the fact that Jane Strauss is American and would probably be writing American English as opposed to British English, I would presume there are even more instances where we British should use capitalization. I would suggest when we are unsure about a word or phrase; we search on-line and see how it’s presented in various official documents there.
I hope this helps.
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I tutor a couple of teenagers in French (my first language) and they get confused because we don’t use capitals for the days of the week or months of the year, but do in English.
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Languages are so confusing, and I’m still trying to learn my own language, ha ha.
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I learned English at school which apparently gives me an advantage. That said, my brain seems to be wired for languages.
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Lucky you! It must be wonderful to speak several languages.
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I’m French, I live in New Zealand, that’s 2 languages, right there. I speak a bit (and understand a lot more) of Spanish, even though I never learned it at school, but we used to go on holiday in Spain when I was growing up. Did German, Italian and Czech in high school/university, mostly forgotten though. Oh and ancient Greek. 😉
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Wow! Do you use them frequently?
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I use English every day, French most days, I guess (emailing my family back in France or on Twitter/Facebook). The rest of them, not so much.
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Wonderful!
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Thank you Carol — you are a woman of many parts – a multi-faceted diamond — and not just a butterfly! I am FOLLOWING your blog thanks to Chris Graham.
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Thank you for your lovely comment. I love Chris’s blog too and I’ll have to thank him for all the fabulous people he’s sent my way.
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Carole, thanks – if you have the time and the inclination, check out my blog: the metaphysical and mundane meanderings of a maverick female scribe – miraprabhu.wordpress.com. Like your idea to support other bloggers and plan to do so! Om from south India!
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I have now discovered your interesting blog thanks to Chris, and I’m also following you.
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Wonderful news, Carole! Love to support and be supported. Om!
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Great source to refer to when I edit my writing. Thanks Carole!
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I just hope no one thinks I’m an authority on this. I’m also learning and just trying to help others along the way.
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Reblogged this on Chris The Story Reading Ape's Blog….. An Author Promotions Enterprise! and commented:
Bet you didn’t know this is a weekly series by Carole – why not call over and follow her blog so you don’t miss the other parts that may be coming out 😀
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Thank you for reblogging Chris. It always helps.
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