Darf es in einer Klassenarbeit als Fehler gewertet werden wenn man das Wort “Du” klein schreibt?

Wenn es nicht am Satzanfang steht sondern mitten im Satz, zum Beispiel “Welches Fach magst du am Liebsten?”

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Janaki
1 year ago

The Duden allows both spellings; I myself prefer the big deal if I use the “you” as a speech. It is for me the written counterpart to look in the eyes of the opposite, when I speak with this – a commandment of courtesy if you so desire.

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Janaki

I don’t think so. In any case in a personal letter, I would probably write it big.

In the normal direct speech, the spelling has nothing to look for here. You’ve never seen it in a novel.

spanferkel14
1 year ago

No, the small letter has been common since the 1st legislative reform. However, if this is some kind of written communication, you can also take the spelling. However, you must be consistent: either always big or small.

  • Hello, Hans, I haven’t seen you for a long time. How are you and your brother? What are you doing now?
  • Hello, Hans, I haven’t seen you for a long time. How are you and your brother? What are you doing now?

But what you have to write is “loved”. This is only the superlative of “dinner”, and you don’t write it big: like – dear – dear.

This has nothing to do with the nomen “my dear,” “my sweetheart”, “my sweetheart” and the despicable name “my old man”.

Onaxer
1 year ago
  • As a rule, the forms of the speech pronoun are written down, as well as those of the majority of them.
  • In letters (also on postcards, etc.), e-mails and SMS you can also write up.
  • Generally speaking, in all the forms of text in which the author himself speaks to the reader personally, you/you and the words mentioned can be raised.
  • Conversely, this also means: in the literal speech (for example in narratives or novels), you and the other words are never raised, since the author does not address the reader here.

Source

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Onaxer

👍

Adzec
1 year ago

No. It wouldn’t be a mistake either. Maybe it could be an expression error. You can only evaluate this in context…

DocteurTiziano2
1 year ago

No. Both variants are possible, most of which are small.

adelaide196970
1 year ago

You’ve always been written in letters apart from the beginning of the sentence. So the above has been in a letter?? Then “You” and also “You” were made big (also you). But this is no longer common everywhere.

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  adelaide196970

The “you” as an address is of course still great.

Spyro2482
1 year ago

This can be evaluated as a mistake when you have beautiful writing the readable is otherwise not

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Spyro2482

That was not the question.

adabei
1 year ago

The spelling is the right spelling here.

Which compartment likes you the love?

(“most dear” one writes small.)

spanferkel14
1 year ago
Reply to  adabei

If it is a letter, an e-mail or the like, the SF can write the “you” big. He then only has to remain consistent in the further course of the letter.

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  spanferkel14

That’s true, of course.

Midgarden
1 year ago

Yes, may be evaluated as an error

Onaxer
1 year ago
Reply to  Midgarden

No.

adabei
1 year ago
Reply to  Midgarden

It’s not a mistake, it’s the right spell.

spanferkel14
1 year ago
Reply to  Midgarden

No, it can’t be if the SF consistently writes “you, you, your”. This is the more common form today, even in letters.