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Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Name of an object

Hi. Please help. If a person wants to put a name underneath an object like a clock to identify it in English, should he or she write "Clock" in capital letters (that is, the first letter in a capital letter) or "clock" in lower-cased letters "clock"? I hope my question is clear to you.
  

Top answer

Anonymous . If a person wants to put a name underneath an object like a clock to identify it in English, should he or she write "Clock" in capital letters (that is, the first letter in a capital letter) or "clock" in lower-cased letters "clock"? Both are in use; I would use 'clock'.

  • Anonymous .
  • If a person wants to put a name underneath an object like a clock to identify it in English, should he or she write "Clock" in capital letters (that is, the first letter in a capital letter) or "clock" in lower-cased letters "clock"?
  • Both are in use; I would use 'clock'.
  • Anonymous I hope my question is clear to you.
  • Yes, it is.
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1 Answers
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Anonymous. If a person wants to put a name underneath an object like a clock to identify it in English, should he or she write "Clock" in capital letters (that is, the first letter in a capital letter) or "clock" in lower-cased letters "clock"?
Both are in use; I would use 'clock'.
Anonymous I hope my question is clear to you.

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