That's the book by dan Brown, isn't it?
this happened when da Vinci was...
this happened when Da Vinci was...
Which one to use?
Da Vinci, as in the book title. It's being used as if it was a surname, which it isn't in this case. Unusual for Dan Brown to get any facts incorrect![]()
He did claim that the book was factually based, and many people believed him.I don't think he claimed the book to be anything but fiction, it's other people and their own interpretations of what they believed to be evidence that suggested otherwise.
As for his naming convention, well Wiki has it down as da Vinci... But I'm sure Michelangelo had a few choice names for his rival.
I don't think he claimed the book to be anything but fiction, it's other people and their own interpretations of what they believed to be evidence that suggested otherwise.
What, you don't think such a highly successful author has a flair for publicity stunts?You are mistaken. He tried, unsuccessfully, to get his publishers to categorize his book as non-fiction. I saw him claim such himself in an interview.
In America, we leave the fine points of orthography and typography to the style manuals. You won't find advice on such a contemporary issue in Strunk & White, which most of us consider the bible of writing, or MLA, which is geared toward academics. But perhaps it's in the New York Times or Chicago Tribune stylebooks. As I said, we Americans are pretty lackadaisical about how we write people's names. Prince (the temperamental rock star from Minnesota) got away for several years with using a made-up sign for a name, for which he had to ship the character to printers. None but the trendiest publications bothered using it, and since no pronunciation was ever explained, the country started calling him The Artist Formerly Known as Prince, or less kindly as TAFKAP.I have seen it used both ways on commercial type websites so i though it was weird. Shouldn't there be an official word on this?
I'm not sure who you're talking about. According to this website, that may be some unfortunate person's real surname. In any case it's hard to Google. The apostophe was probably added specifically to solve that technical problem.How about De'Ath.They are so determined that you pronounce it Duh-Ath rather than Death that they stick in an extra apostrophe. Or is there a part of the name missing.