Originally posted by Segilla
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On the subject of capitals, there has been a clear tendency for at least 200 years to reduce the use of capitals. It was certainly common to capitalise all or most nouns when Defoe and Swift were writing. As far as 'home secretary' goes, though, I don't agree with you. Titles of any sort are a kind of jargon, and it's often necessary to remind people of that; capitals do this well. So, home secretary may be easy to understand (though not literally, surely - it sounds more like someone who administers homes), but chancellor of the exchequer isn't. By using capitals it becomes clear that it's a title, a bit of jargon for 'government person responsible for finance'.
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