Specifically, is using capital letters at the start of sentences part of grammar?

February 18th, 2010 | by admin |

I know grammar includes syntex and morphology. Obviously a variety of things make up a good sentence (grammar, punctuation etc.). Does using capital letters at the start of sentences come directly under the use of grammar, or another term?

Hope this makes sense.

It’s part of what’s called "mechanics." It makes text easier to read.

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Tags: Capital Letters, Good Sentence, Grammar Punctuation, Mechanics, Morphology, Sentences, Syntex, Term Hope, Variety

5 Responses to “Specifically, is using capital letters at the start of sentences part of grammar?”

  1. By anna on Feb 18, 2010

    It’s part of what’s called "mechanics." It makes text easier to read.
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  2. By lisa_b on Feb 18, 2010

    yes it does.
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  3. By Carolina Sunshine on Feb 18, 2010

    It makes it grammatically correct to start each sentence with a capital letter. I would imagine the reason being, it is easier to know when one sentence ends and another starts
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  4. By Gerry Atrix on Feb 18, 2010

    Full stop (period in USof A) = I have finished with that bit.
    Capital letter = I am starting again probably another topic..
    Very good grammatical writing..
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  5. By CAROL W on Feb 18, 2010

    Yes it is a part of grammatical construction
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