Style comparison
MLA Style vs Lowercase

MLA Style capitalizes major words in formal titles, while lowercase removes all capitalization for technical or stylistic purposes.

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MLA Style
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Lowercase
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MLA Style
The humanities paper standard

MLA Style capitalizes all principal words while lowercasing articles, prepositions, and coordinating conjunctions unless they open or close a title. It follows the Modern Language Association Handbook.

MLA Style is required for papers in English literature, film studies, and other humanities disciplines at most universities. It is the most common format for undergraduate academic writing.

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Lowercase
all lowercase

Lowercase converts every letter to its uncapitalized form. It is used for URL slugs, code identifiers, file names, and stylized creative copy where conventional capitalization is intentionally set aside.

Lowercase is required for most URLs, programming variables, and database identifiers. It is also adopted as a deliberate stylistic choice in branding and social media.

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When to use MLA Style

MLA Style is required for papers in English literature, film studies, and other humanities disciplines at most universities. It is the most common format for undergraduate academic writing.

Verbs are always capitalized, including short ones like is and are. The rules closely resemble Chicago Style for most practical purposes.

When to use Lowercase

Lowercase is required for most URLs, programming variables, and database identifiers. It is also adopted as a deliberate stylistic choice in branding and social media.

Every letter is lowercased. This is the default state of text before any capitalization rules are applied.

Choosing between them

Choose MLA Style for academic writing and citations in the humanities.

Choose lowercase for URLs, code, and stylized creative copy.

The two have no overlapping use cases. Academic writing requires MLA Style where specified, and technical identifiers require lowercase.