Don't worry about it. Actually it is "Canadian Dollars", The whole expression is a proper noun. But
who cares, other than my 6th grade English teacher (Now why is "Canadian Dollars" capitalized but
not "English teacher"?*), and the anally retenitive? You were perfectly understandable.
Before Mr Webster formalized it you pretty much spelled things any way that
would be understandable.
*A teacher of English v. a dollar of Canada.
graywolf
http://www.graywolfphoto.com
"Idiot Proof" <==> "Expert Proof"
-----------------------------------
Andre Langevin wrote:
----- Original Message ----- From: "Andre Langevin" Subject: Re: FS:
Ist D (New w. 2-year warranty)
1350. canadian dollars...
Thats Canadian dollars, if you please.
William Robb
My english grammar is fiddly. In french, canadian as an adjective goes
with a lower case. Hence my mistake. Sorry...
Andre
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