No. Upper case is used, along with a period for the abbreviation as "Jr." - if spelled out, "Junior".
If you're not referring to a specific county (as in this sentence), use lower case 'c.' If you're referring to a specific county, use upper case 'C," e.g., "Cook County is in Illinois."
No sq ft is usually written in lower case. Or ft2
The plural of the proper noun Emmy is usually Emmys, and very rarely Emmies. This is a trademark name, and therefore distinct from abbreviations that use upper and lower case. It is also seen using an apostrophe, but this is technically erroneous.To avoid having to decide, you can always use "Emmy awards."
Some people use their middle name, rather than their first name. In that case it is the first initial of their given first name.
Yes, you do because the apostrophe, in this case, shows belonging. The name belongs to your mom.
if needing to write a letter always capitalize the first letter on a new scentence. for example : I like to eat icecream. My favorite flavor is strawberry and chocolate. the rest must be lower case
Hi I dont think ur question is right because ,the Email ID is not case sensitive and u can use both lower and upper case letters.But it wont look good when u use upper case,thats the reason we use lower case letters.
Use the UPPER function
When writing XHTML, yes! Valid XHTML tags and attributes (but not values) must be lowercase. When referring to XHTML in other languages like CSS or JavaScript, case sensitivity is usually present.
In Latin, originally, there were no lower case letters. Some documents, though, found in the ruins of Herculaneum shows some lower case letters, but not with specific syntax. It wasn't until the much later that lower case writing became widely used, and then it was more of a replacement for the existing "upper case" letters. The rules we use today weren't standardized until the 18th century.
There are a couple of different ways to convert upper case characters to lower case in easytrieve. One is to use the INSPECT/CONVERTING command.
Personally I use lower case.
If you're not referring to a specific county (as in this sentence), use lower case 'c.' If you're referring to a specific county, use upper case 'C," e.g., "Cook County is in Illinois."
Or can you use nK?
it means that an input field does not care if you use upper or lower case as letters
You do not use a hyphen when writing square feet. Using a hyphen would make it one word which should not be the case.
no