Subj : Earth or the Earth To : alexander koryagin From : Roy Witt Date : Sat Mar 03 2018 08:24:55 28 Jun 12 13:39, alexander koryagin wrote to Roy Witt: ak>>>>> Quite often I see that people call this planet "Earth", whereas I ak>>>>> read it must be called "the Earth". Maybe there is a rule? RW>> Look up the definition of 'the' in an English dictionary ... there RW>> are several ways in which to use the word. One that fits your 'the RW>> earth' scenario is: RW>> The, determiner (article): used preceding titles and certain RW>> uniquely specific or proper nouns, such as place names; the United RW>> States; the Honourable Edward Brown; the Chairman; the moon, the RW>> Earth... RW>> i.e. Earth is the name (noun) of the planet that you live on. RW>> Mars is the name (noun) of a planet in this solar system. ak> Yes, but when your dictionary enumerates the planet names it uses ak> "the Earth". (begins with a capital letter). "the earth" is also all ak> right, but it is IMHO a different term. For instance, "The earth was ak> very close, and the pilot baled out." If you look up 'earth' in the dictionary, it decribes differences in the use of the word, some capped and some not capped. If you're speaking of the Earth as a subject, it is a noun and a capital E is supposed to be used. Meanwhile earth with a small case e may be just plain old dirt in a sentence like: "the earth shook for several minutes" R\%/itt --- Twit(t) Filter v2.1 (C) 2000-10 * Origin: Roiz Flying \A/ Service * South Texas * USA * (1:387/22) .