"either" big or small?
Is "either" capitalized or lowercase here?
a) These are the situations in which we have to decide: Either God or his gift!
b) These are the situations in which we have to decide: either God or his gift!
Is "either" capitalized or lowercase here?
a) These are the situations in which we have to decide: Either God or his gift!
b) These are the situations in which we have to decide: either God or his gift!
Nobody cares, does it? For example, spelling at work. You're there to work.
I am currently in 10th grade at high school and will have to decide soon (in a month or so) what I will choose. Actually, I was always sure I would choose German, but since this year started I have become more and more undecided, especially because of my motivation and the very good teacher…
Hi, Do commas belong here in the sentences or are they placed correctly? 1. Mr. Mustermann has been informed that ______ has commissioned the files to be examined in _____. 2. _____ that it is the period in which her wife ______ 3. Mr. Mustermann declares that he wants to inform his wife of this….
Why is "Willen" capitalized in the following example? "Hubert buys a new cell phone against his mother's wishes ." Please don't explain things too complicatedly. Thanks in advance!
You can find everything from completely incomprehensible jumble to hordes of spelling mistakes.
Hello,
it is written big. You start a sentence – to: After either at the beginning of the sentence no comma comes – you do not use any, so this is another indication of a beginning of the sentence.
What disturbs me more about the sentence: You speak of situations and then list: God and gift (both no situation). But I don’t know the context.
LG
That’s not a real sentence? More like a call.
Big would be fine, but small would be right
Good objection 😅 thanks for the correction
Before:
Our God is a God of joy, and he does not call us to wait, because he wants us to feel bad. He calls us to wait, because he wants us to experience the greatest joy that a person can experience at all: him himself. Of course, for the world there is nothing more absurd than a person striving for sexual purity. And this not because of any religious duties, but because of faith, that he experiences a greater joy that God keeps ready to those who trust him. And in the end, God seems all the more valuable to us if we do not give up temporary joys to have more of him.
These are the situations where we have to decide: either God or His gift!
Okay, yes, here is the situation and thus the “that” refers to the context 🙂
By the way, Satiharuu kept the law with the great and small.
A small thing: one sentence does not begin with “and” 🙂 – the sentence can remain so. Just take the point away.
From > faith <
Since 1996 small
Great before
(So far you can use both, and hardly anyone will complain, except you give German lessons or so)
The legislative reform is not about the “either” but about the “Oder”
Until 96 it was either-Oder
Then either or
LG
Since 1996, rates are started small? I didn’t know. but I’m trying to stick to your rule.
to start small, but looks pretty strange.
Did you tell the Duden editorial that sentences started small since 1996?
and what does the word mean “gross”?
and why don’t your sentences end?
rates usually end with a point, a question mark or an exclamation mark.
you can’t afford
Satiharuu is quite right here – according to the double point only big is written in a literal speech, or if a complete sentence follows.
There is no literal speech here, nor is it a complete sentence – where is the predicate? Do you see a second position verb somewhere?
The shortest sentence: I go.
“Even Nomen or Nomen” is not a sentence.. (is – ver in second position)
It would be a sentence, there would be: either God gives or God takes
Then it would be a sentence again. Subject > Predicated
“You can choose: either cucumbers or tomatoes!” The sentence begins at “Du” and ends at “Tomaten!” Do not start at “du” and end at “choose”. – Nominative cucumbers or tomatoes – either one or the other
I hope you have already given to the Duden editorial office that the German sentences without subjects and predicate know that both God and Gabe is the object to the subject “we” and the predicate “choose”
…. I mean, after the double point
What are you doing against my sentences? I’m not compelled to write perfectly, I’m so nice and adapt myself to you in language
It’s a pity that you don’t just miss phrases, but also any arguments.
There are still no arguments 😅
My grammar comes from the Alemannian. I’d like to believe that you don’t know more than the Hanover Platt.
But where exactly is the verb in: “either God or his gift!”?
“instead of one”?
What language is that?
In German, the word “instead” follows a genitive.
Thus, constructions such as “instead of one” and “instead of one” are possible.
“Instead of one” is not German.
But: Yes, you better come with good arguments than with those you could not bring so far.
😅 Better come with good arguments instead of a nacist ghetto of unsustainable diffamation.
Too bad your strings have no end.
If they had an end, you could consider the characters you’re following each other as sentences.
Thank you.
I wish you no longer find any lies.
Don’t let me in on your frustration. Wish you a nice day ☀️
…. what, did you say, after what, double?
… And why do you think that’s the double?
… why, did you, your opinion, not already, before, the double?