history of the ___ VS. history of _____





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I need to fix a title of an article: which sentence is correct?




  1. History of Wall Calendar Design

  2. History of the Wall Calendar Design

  3. History of the Wall Calendar

  4. History of Wall Calendar


where the article talks about the story of how the design of the wall calendar has evolved thru history...



thanks










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    I need to fix a title of an article: which sentence is correct?




    1. History of Wall Calendar Design

    2. History of the Wall Calendar Design

    3. History of the Wall Calendar

    4. History of Wall Calendar


    where the article talks about the story of how the design of the wall calendar has evolved thru history...



    thanks










    share|improve this question
















    bumped to the homepage by Community 15 mins ago


    This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.


















      0












      0








      0








      I need to fix a title of an article: which sentence is correct?




      1. History of Wall Calendar Design

      2. History of the Wall Calendar Design

      3. History of the Wall Calendar

      4. History of Wall Calendar


      where the article talks about the story of how the design of the wall calendar has evolved thru history...



      thanks










      share|improve this question
















      I need to fix a title of an article: which sentence is correct?




      1. History of Wall Calendar Design

      2. History of the Wall Calendar Design

      3. History of the Wall Calendar

      4. History of Wall Calendar


      where the article talks about the story of how the design of the wall calendar has evolved thru history...



      thanks







      expressions nouns articles title






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited Oct 10 '18 at 2:16







      Francesco

















      asked Oct 10 '18 at 2:11









      FrancescoFrancesco

      1033




      1033





      bumped to the homepage by Community 15 mins ago


      This question has answers that may be good or bad; the system has marked it active so that they can be reviewed.







      bumped to the homepage by Community 15 mins ago


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          1 Answer
          1






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          0














          This question can be answered with another question: What are you trying to say?



          Let us assume that you are writing for a museum, and in that museum there is a centrepiece, the wall calendar that is somehow notable, you are writing an article about it and you would correctly title it «History of the wall calendar». You would use «the» in the title because we should already know which specific wall calendar you are going to talk about.



          However, more likely possibility is that you are writing about the whole concept of wall calendars, and how that conceptual wall calendar has changed through the years (decades, centuries). In that case I would use the «History of wall calendar» since there is no one specific calendar that has survived all that time, but the concept of putting calendars on walls has.






          share|improve this answer
























          • the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 3:12













          • History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 10 '18 at 6:47













          • ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 14:30











          • @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

            – v010dya
            Oct 11 '18 at 5:58











          • @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 11 '18 at 6:02












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          1 Answer
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          active

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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

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          active

          oldest

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          active

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          0














          This question can be answered with another question: What are you trying to say?



          Let us assume that you are writing for a museum, and in that museum there is a centrepiece, the wall calendar that is somehow notable, you are writing an article about it and you would correctly title it «History of the wall calendar». You would use «the» in the title because we should already know which specific wall calendar you are going to talk about.



          However, more likely possibility is that you are writing about the whole concept of wall calendars, and how that conceptual wall calendar has changed through the years (decades, centuries). In that case I would use the «History of wall calendar» since there is no one specific calendar that has survived all that time, but the concept of putting calendars on walls has.






          share|improve this answer
























          • the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 3:12













          • History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 10 '18 at 6:47













          • ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 14:30











          • @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

            – v010dya
            Oct 11 '18 at 5:58











          • @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 11 '18 at 6:02
















          0














          This question can be answered with another question: What are you trying to say?



          Let us assume that you are writing for a museum, and in that museum there is a centrepiece, the wall calendar that is somehow notable, you are writing an article about it and you would correctly title it «History of the wall calendar». You would use «the» in the title because we should already know which specific wall calendar you are going to talk about.



          However, more likely possibility is that you are writing about the whole concept of wall calendars, and how that conceptual wall calendar has changed through the years (decades, centuries). In that case I would use the «History of wall calendar» since there is no one specific calendar that has survived all that time, but the concept of putting calendars on walls has.






          share|improve this answer
























          • the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 3:12













          • History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 10 '18 at 6:47













          • ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 14:30











          • @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

            – v010dya
            Oct 11 '18 at 5:58











          • @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 11 '18 at 6:02














          0












          0








          0







          This question can be answered with another question: What are you trying to say?



          Let us assume that you are writing for a museum, and in that museum there is a centrepiece, the wall calendar that is somehow notable, you are writing an article about it and you would correctly title it «History of the wall calendar». You would use «the» in the title because we should already know which specific wall calendar you are going to talk about.



          However, more likely possibility is that you are writing about the whole concept of wall calendars, and how that conceptual wall calendar has changed through the years (decades, centuries). In that case I would use the «History of wall calendar» since there is no one specific calendar that has survived all that time, but the concept of putting calendars on walls has.






          share|improve this answer













          This question can be answered with another question: What are you trying to say?



          Let us assume that you are writing for a museum, and in that museum there is a centrepiece, the wall calendar that is somehow notable, you are writing an article about it and you would correctly title it «History of the wall calendar». You would use «the» in the title because we should already know which specific wall calendar you are going to talk about.



          However, more likely possibility is that you are writing about the whole concept of wall calendars, and how that conceptual wall calendar has changed through the years (decades, centuries). In that case I would use the «History of wall calendar» since there is no one specific calendar that has survived all that time, but the concept of putting calendars on walls has.







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Oct 10 '18 at 2:27









          v010dyav010dya

          3143518




          3143518













          • the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 3:12













          • History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 10 '18 at 6:47













          • ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 14:30











          • @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

            – v010dya
            Oct 11 '18 at 5:58











          • @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 11 '18 at 6:02



















          • the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 3:12













          • History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 10 '18 at 6:47













          • ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

            – Francesco
            Oct 10 '18 at 14:30











          • @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

            – v010dya
            Oct 11 '18 at 5:58











          • @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

            – Jason Bassford
            Oct 11 '18 at 6:02

















          the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

          – Francesco
          Oct 10 '18 at 3:12







          the latter, you are correct. but what about title #1 ? i want to be sure the subject of the article (for a design magazine) is about the design evolution... not the use of it in people's life...

          – Francesco
          Oct 10 '18 at 3:12















          History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

          – Jason Bassford
          Oct 10 '18 at 6:47







          History of wall calendar is ungrammatical. If you are going to drop the article, it should be history of wall calendars (plural). I also disagree that the definite article can only refer to an identified, instantiated object. You can still say history of the wall calendar and be talking about wall calendars in general. Actually, if referring to an specific centrepiece, the article would most likely read history of this wall calendar.)

          – Jason Bassford
          Oct 10 '18 at 6:47















          ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

          – Francesco
          Oct 10 '18 at 14:30





          ok let's focus on the design part. forget #3 and #4. which one is correct between #1 and #2? the article is centered around DESIGN, around calendar design, not calendars ad object

          – Francesco
          Oct 10 '18 at 14:30













          @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

          – v010dya
          Oct 11 '18 at 5:58





          @JasonBassford «History of wall calendars» says something different, it says that you are studying different individual calendars as they have appeared in history, not the evolution of the concept itself. Compare «Opposition to war», «Opposition to the war», «Opposition to wars».

          – v010dya
          Oct 11 '18 at 5:58













          @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

          – Jason Bassford
          Oct 11 '18 at 6:02





          @v010dya You can say history of the wall calendar, history of wall calendars, or history of this wall calendar. But you cannot say history of wall calendar (without the definite article).

          – Jason Bassford
          Oct 11 '18 at 6:02


















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