Event JSON
{
"id": "76c87896053837a6d24cab9f97ef629552ec3ec3967ddb0114912d89733ae740",
"pubkey": "ae947543152d3049444c930c2d35a0edc7d19a4e517cee01fd1ba03874437724",
"created_at": 1704390511,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"p",
"3f3ceedf46a911d38bed5b37ab6749382a7abc6b3f1c2095b48beeebc9631909",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
],
[
"p",
"8fbf2dfd5fb75af20567cda3d11034692ef21af602844041d6e90ce164444438",
"wss://relay.mostr.pub"
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[
"e",
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"reply"
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[
"proxy",
"https://zirk.us/users/grammargirl/statuses/111698936584670654",
"activitypub"
]
],
"content": "nostr:npub18u7wah6x4yga8zldtvm6ke6f8q4840rt8uwzp9d530hwhjtrryysjmd8up That's a tricky one! It depends on whether the word is part of the name. So if you're using \"aunt\" descriptively, for example, it's lowercase: \"My aunt Mary is coming over for dinner,\" (or \"My aunt, Mary, is coming over for dinner,\" if you have only one aunt). \n\nBut if you always call her Aunt Mary and use that phrase as though it were her name, then you capitalize the word \"aunt\": I love having Aunt Mary over for dinner.\"",
"sig": "0c9e224aaf39287b36ff9ce868945d63f06bf6129234f5feae54bb8e996a2a7f5d4c05b74ffcccdaaa95af2f7a282984dab294b5cc4fda9a5bd966d737b86354"
}