Hello,
A client asked me to deliver an authoritative ruling on the spelling of Petri
dish versus petri dish. It's apparently named after Julius Petri, a German
bacteriologist. My dictionary (Oxford) has it with a capital P. I see some
examples with a lowercase p.
Are there any thoughts about: American versus U.K. spelling, does it look more
modern to change from uppercase to lowercase?
I was trying to think of similar examples: where an uppercase is used to
signify that an object was due to an inventor. But I can only think of
trademarked cases.
--Susan Peters
________________________________
From: mea-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx <mea-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> on behalf of Simone
Allard <simallard@xxxxxxxxx>
Sent: December 2, 2014 3:13 PM
To: mea@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [mea] Re: ListServe
Testing, 1,2…
From: mea-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:mea-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of ;
cheri.frazer@xxxxxxxxxx
Sent: December-02-14 2:27 PM
To: Debra Maione
Cc: mea@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [mea] Re: ListServe
Hiya~
Send a test message to mea@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:mea@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> and see what
happens...
-C.
From: Debra Maione <elcprof@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:elcprof@xxxxxxxxx>>
To: Cheri Frazer <clfrazer@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:clfrazer@xxxxxxxxx>>
Date: 2014-12-02 02:19 PM
Subject: ListServe
________________________________
Hi!
Either this list has been very inactive, or I'm still not getting emails. Am I
on the list yet?
elcprof@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:elcprof@xxxxxxxxx>
Debra Maione
Sent hurriedly from a mobile device with a nefarious auto-correct function:
please forgive undetected nonsense!
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