When we regard something as a subject, we use a capital letter to start it:
She majored in History at Stanford.
But is it OK to use a small letter h?
(by the way, is the opposite of CAPITAL LETTER necessarily SMALL LETTER?)
I am studying at university in Hong Kong and major in English.
Context is important. Please provide enough for us to be able to deal effectively with your question.
Your thread title should include all or part of the word/phrase being discussed.
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***** NOT A TEACHER *****
I believe you're wrong here. "history" is lowercased because it is not derived from a proper noun. See:
Degree Names from Common Nouns are Lowercased
Subject names such as "chemistry," "math," and "visual arts" are not capitalized because they don't come from proper nouns.
(Grammar Girl : When Do You Capitalize Academic Degrees? :: Quick and Dirty Tips ™)
In other words, you should write "history" with a lowercase "h"!
First of all, thank you for your citation and your answer. But there is no need for me to read it.
major - Definition and pronunciation | Oxford Advanced Learners Dictionary at OxfordLearnersDictionaries.com
The sentence has been taken from the dictionary; if you say it is wrong, you are saying this Oxford Dictionary is wrong.
Last edited by nelson13; 05-Nov-2012 at 22:49.
I am studying at university in Hong Kong and major in English.
Like so many things, this is a matter of style, not grammar. Neither is "wrong" and neither is "right."
The only that that would be wrong would be to say "He majored in History and she majored in chemistry." Both or neither. Naturally, anything with a proper noun could be capitalized: He majored English.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
If my sentence caused trouble for you, I would say sorry.
The important thing is that if there is anyone who thinks my sentence wrong, he should view the sentence in isolation, but not to suddenly think it correct when I tell him I've got the sentence from an authoritative source.
I appreciate the effort you made to reply to my question, but I must say that before saying a sentence is wrong, one must give it "a million thoughts", but not only a second thought. This is respect. English is not my mother tongue, and even for native English speakers who have doctorates, such as at my university, very often they cannot say whether a sentence is correct. Not because they are not learned, but because English is really a difficult language. I am more than happy to say 'I stand corrected', because someone is improving my English. But before pointing out my fault, people should be more careful.
I am studying at university in Hong Kong and major in English.
Argh. Two mistakes in the same post.
Definitely IN.
Definitely should, or even must.
I'm not a teacher, but I write for a living. Please don't ask me about 2nd conditionals, but I'm a safe bet for what reads well in (American) English.
An equally authoritative source, the Macmillan Dictionary, gives the example 'She's majoring in physics'.
Just because you have found one version in one dictionary, you cannot assume that all dictionaries will agree.
As Barb said 'It's a matter of style, not grammar'.
Chicken Sandwich's link on the subject is an excellent article. You might have learnt something from it if you had taken the trouble to read it instead of pompously dismissing it.
Rover
Last edited by Rover_KE; 06-Nov-2012 at 02:51.