Capitalisation in a title.
Moderators: Dimitris, maneki neko2, Lorikeet, Enrico Palazzo, superpeach, cecil2, Mr. Kalgukshi2
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Mon May 12, 2008 9:24 am
Capitalisation in a title.
Hello there,
I am currently teaching English in South Korea and a newcomer to this site, so please be gentle with me!
I spent a good few hours yesterday evening browsing through various forums to find an answer to my question, which is: what is the rule on capitalisating the first letter of each word in titles? Recently, a student handed in an essay that had the title, "The Rent and The Two Tenants." I'd corrected to, "The rent and the two tenants." My student then came back to me and asked why this was so, and told me that a previous teacher of hers taught her to capitalise every word in a title except for articles and conjunctions. I'd asked around to a few of my colleagues and their responses were mixed. Some said that you had to capitalise and some said that you shouldn't. I looked at the titles of some books I read and on most of them, the first letter of each word was capitalised. However, one book I had (an English grammar book, no less!) did not.
I am severely confused. I don't know whether to put this one down as an AmE vs BrE difference or the fact that I'm wrong.
Many advance thanks for your help,
Ki
I am currently teaching English in South Korea and a newcomer to this site, so please be gentle with me!
I spent a good few hours yesterday evening browsing through various forums to find an answer to my question, which is: what is the rule on capitalisating the first letter of each word in titles? Recently, a student handed in an essay that had the title, "The Rent and The Two Tenants." I'd corrected to, "The rent and the two tenants." My student then came back to me and asked why this was so, and told me that a previous teacher of hers taught her to capitalise every word in a title except for articles and conjunctions. I'd asked around to a few of my colleagues and their responses were mixed. Some said that you had to capitalise and some said that you shouldn't. I looked at the titles of some books I read and on most of them, the first letter of each word was capitalised. However, one book I had (an English grammar book, no less!) did not.
I am severely confused. I don't know whether to put this one down as an AmE vs BrE difference or the fact that I'm wrong.
Many advance thanks for your help,
Ki
-
- Posts: 39
- Joined: Fri Apr 13, 2007 4:24 pm
-
- Posts: 1303
- Joined: Sat Jun 19, 2004 6:14 am
- Location: London
-
- Posts: 7
- Joined: Mon May 12, 2008 9:24 am
Please keep the replies coming in!
So, it sounds like to me that both formats are correct? Although, the non-capitalised format is rather outdated? I, also, learnt how to write during the 1980s! Perhaps, this non-capitalised format is something that some British people still use?
This situation reminds me of while vs. whilst!
thanks again to the above posters.
Ki
So, it sounds like to me that both formats are correct? Although, the non-capitalised format is rather outdated? I, also, learnt how to write during the 1980s! Perhaps, this non-capitalised format is something that some British people still use?
This situation reminds me of while vs. whilst!
thanks again to the above posters.
Ki