Style comparison
MLA Style vs Uppercase

MLA Style applies selective title case rules to formal academic titles, while uppercase converts every letter to a capital.

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MLA Style
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Uppercase
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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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Uppercase
ALL CAPITALS

Uppercase converts every letter to its capital form without exception. It is used for warning labels, legal notices, acronyms, design contexts, and any text requiring maximum visual weight.

All caps is appropriate for short, high-emphasis phrases, system alerts, and design headlines. Extended uppercase text is harder to read and should be used sparingly.

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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 Uppercase

All caps is appropriate for short, high-emphasis phrases, system alerts, and design headlines. Extended uppercase text is harder to read and should be used sparingly.

Every letter is capitalized. Punctuation, numbers, and symbols are unchanged. Letter-spacing is often added in design contexts to improve readability.

Choosing between them

Choose MLA Style for academic papers and citations.

Choose uppercase for emphasis, warnings, and short design headlines.

Uppercase is not used in academic citations or headings. MLA Style governs those contexts with specific rules.