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N Is for Our Nation's Capital by Marie Smith
N Is for Our Nation's Capital by Marie Smith










N Is for Our Nation

They also echo a Germanic influence according to which all nouns are capitalized, a practice that can be seen in English as late as the 1749 publication of Henry Fielding’s The History of Tom Jones, a Foundling.īut unless you are quoting the Pledge of Allegiance or writing a historical novel-or otherwise deliberately invoking a bygone age-write “nation. The capital N was retained when the pledge was enacted by Congress into law in 1942, as were the capitals in “Flag” and “Republic” “Liberty” and “Justice,” however, were demoted to “liberty” and “justice.” The current version retains the 1942 capitalization along with the words “under God” (added by congressional amendment in 1954).Īll these capital letters evoke a religious and patriotic sensibility that was typical of a certain brand of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American prose. As originally published, on September 8, 1892, in the Youth’s Companion, as part of a Columbus Day program for American schools, the pledge read as follows: “I pledge allegiance to my Flag and the Republic for which it stands: one Nation indivisible, with Liberty and Justice for all.” N Is for Our Nation's Capital: A Washington DC Alphabet (Discover America State by State) by Smith, Marie, Smith, Roland(April 15, 2005) Hardcover on.

N Is for Our Nation

If you are quoting from the Pledge of Allegiance (to the United States and its flag), then yes. Should the word “nation” be capitalized?Ī.












N Is for Our Nation's Capital by Marie Smith