alien
Assuming you mean in cursive, that would be A, C, E, H, J, K, M, N, R, U, X, Y, and Z, possibly L and Q depending on what you were taught.
Always remember to dot your i's and cross your t's.
LOL (also written with some or all letters lowercase) is an abbreviation for laughing out loud or laugh out loud
First, "case" refers to whether a letter or letters of the alphabet are in CAPS or are in lowercase. (Or, caps and small letters.)"Case sensitive" is a phrase meaning that computers, especially in website-creation, will read letters differently depending on whether the letters are in CAPS or in lowercase. Web URLs (the address) and passwords are most often case-sensitive. So, if you see in part of a URL this:categoryABC-ID1356that lettering is different fromcategoryabc-id1356The first one would also be different from:categoryAbc-Id1356 (or any other combination of upper and lowercase lettering)Web hosting sites may require case-sensitive rules, while other websites do not use case-sensitive (instead, they are case-insensitive). Passwords may be either case-sensitive or case-insensitive, but most are case-sensitive. This is why you might sometimes see the message to check your Cap Lock status when a (otherwise correct) password fails.So, there is a difference, for example, between each of these:case sensitiveCASE SENSITIVECaSe sEnSiTiVe (or other combination of lowercase letters and capital letters).
A small bee in a big hive.(The letters of "hive" are capitalized or big whilst the letter 'b' is in lowercase or small)
Uppercase---UPPERCASE TYPE LETTERS---Capital letters Lowercase---lowercase type letters----small letters
THESE LETTERS ARE IN UPPERCASE. these letters are in lowercase. These Letters Are in Upper and Lower Case.
Uppercase and Lowercase is wut u use on the computer to type.Uppercase is Capital.Lowercase is smaller letters.
A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.A, H, I, and a few others more. Note that those are uppercase letters. Since "symmetry" is related to the exact form of the letters, the situation with uppercase letters is different than with lowercase letters.
The current theory is that all lowercase letters originated from the quick handwriting of uppercase letters.
Uppercase means capital letters, as in "ABCDE." Lowercase means non-capital letters, as in "abcde."
There are no upper or lowercase numbers, but uppercase letters are like this: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ and lowercase are like this: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz. ---- Contrary to what the above answerer has said, there actually are upper and lowercase numbers, which are used specifically when designing using typography. An Uppercase Number, 1 = One < Uppercase
As proper nouns they should be written with an initial uppercase letter followed by the rest of the letters in lowercase.
These are lowercase letters : abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz These are uppercase letters: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ They are called "uppercase" and "lowercase" because in the days when printing was done using lead type, the printer compiling the text kept the capital letters in the "upper row" and the small letters in the "lower row" so that they were sorted out ready to hand when needed.
These are lowercase letters : abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz These are uppercase letters: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ They are called "uppercase" and "lowercase" because in the days when printing was done using lead type, the printer compiling the text kept the capital letters in the "upper row" and the small letters in the "lower row" so that they were sorted out ready to hand when needed.
1 as it has everything
No, at least not in American Sign Language