More "all caps" crap. I'm tired of the crap videos saying that your name in all caps on your birth certificate means you're a financial investment or some such. For one thing, my name is not in all caps on my birth certificate. It's not in all caps on any birth certificate I've ever seen in my genealogy work in my state and in surrounding states. Names were only put in all caps in older typed documents for emphasis, as typewriters didn't have boldface.
They are not written in any special language. There is the word "Name" and a blank line with a name written in longhand. It's the same thing for the other blanks. I have seen more documents in a month than you've seen in your entire life. I also worked many years in a law firm and know firsthand why the names in wills, etc. were typed in all caps. It was because there is no boldface on typewriters, at least not years ago. After we got laser printers, we could put things in bold to emphasize them.
People of low IQ look at legal documents, and they are as unintelligible as Greek would be. They have to claim it's some language other than English in an attempt to keep from showing their ignorance.
I am not close-minded. I simply know what I've seen myself. Birth certificates, at least in the South, don't have the names in all caps, nor do they have "serial numbers." At the very most, they have a page number in the book they're bound in. In NC, we've had birth certificates since about November of 1913. So there are over 100 birth certificate books in each county. Therefore, there would be, for example, over 100 certificates with page 35 at the top.
I've seen thousands of documents and watched dozens of videos. The videos are all total BS.
More "all caps" crap. I'm tired of the crap videos saying that your name in all caps on your birth certificate means you're a financial investment or some such. For one thing, my name is not in all caps on my birth certificate. It's not in all caps on any birth certificate I've ever seen in my genealogy work in my state and in surrounding states. Names were only put in all caps in older typed documents for emphasis, as typewriters didn't have boldface.
Some people.
They are not written in any special language. There is the word "Name" and a blank line with a name written in longhand. It's the same thing for the other blanks. I have seen more documents in a month than you've seen in your entire life. I also worked many years in a law firm and know firsthand why the names in wills, etc. were typed in all caps. It was because there is no boldface on typewriters, at least not years ago. After we got laser printers, we could put things in bold to emphasize them.
People of low IQ look at legal documents, and they are as unintelligible as Greek would be. They have to claim it's some language other than English in an attempt to keep from showing their ignorance.
I am not close-minded. I simply know what I've seen myself. Birth certificates, at least in the South, don't have the names in all caps, nor do they have "serial numbers." At the very most, they have a page number in the book they're bound in. In NC, we've had birth certificates since about November of 1913. So there are over 100 birth certificate books in each county. Therefore, there would be, for example, over 100 certificates with page 35 at the top.
I've seen thousands of documents and watched dozens of videos. The videos are all total BS.
It is English. At least that's what I'm using. Your language is substandard English.