Title Case Converter: Perfect Headlines Every Time
- "the last of the mohicans"
- "The Last of the Mohicans"
- "The Last Of The Mohicans"
Which one is correct? Capitalization rules are confusing. Should "of" be capitalized? What about "the"? What if "Is" is part of the verb?
Depending on whether you are using AP Style, Chicago Manual of Style, or MLA, the rules change. But for most web writing and email subjects, you just want it to look Professional.
You need a Text Case Converter.
Common Case Types
- Title Case: "The Quick Brown Fox". Capitalizes major words. Good for headlines (H1, H2) and book titles.
- Sentence case: "The quick brown fox". Only the first letter is capitalized. Standard for body text and sentences.
- UPPERCASE: "THE QUICK BROWN FOX". Screaming. Use sparingly for emphasis.
- lowercase: "the quick brown fox". Informal or stylistic.
Why Use an Automatic Converter?
- Consistency: If you are writing a blog with 10 headers, you want them all to look the same. Mixing "Title Case" and "Sentence case" looks amateurish.
- Speed: Don't waste time holding the Shift key or going back to edit letters. Type fast, then convert.
- Fixing Accidental Caps Lock: We've all looked up at the screen to see "tHESE ARE THE NOTES FOR THE MEETING". One click fixes it to "These are the notes for the meeting."
How to Convert Text
- Paste your messy text into the Case Converter.
- Click the button for the format you want (e.g., "Title Case").
- Copy the result.
It's a simple, single-purpose tool that belongs in every writer's bookmark bar.