Majuscule in a sentence as a noun

Oh, I assumed that "omega" is minuscule, and "Omega" would be majuscule, just like in LaTeX.

What about all the alphabets, abjads, etc. that don't have separate majuscule and minuscule letters?

I find it ironic that a site selling a book about UX/UI/Usability talks would have 100% of the copy written in majuscule.

Integrals, sweeping braces, majuscule and minescule letters, suffixes, Greek..

Majuscule in a sentence as an adjective

Among the rules for good writing should also be, don't use four thousand semicolons to weld your entire essay into a heaving sea of words which offers the reader not even the life ring of a majuscule here and there.

Given that the monks who began employing majuscule and minuscule would surely have been familiar with Hebrew script, I'm hardly surprised they initially went to making the last letter significant instead of the first.

I am no longer young enough to love chaos, and I am reasonably familiar with recent history; I suppose this might make me look reactionary on some subjects and from a certain point of view, but I have never since childhood dreamt of dignifying any opinion I might hold with a name involving either a majuscule or an "-ism".Your links, I'm afraid, shed little light on the matter.

Majuscule definitions

noun

one of the large alphabetic characters used as the first letter in writing or printing proper names and sometimes for emphasis; "printers once kept the type for capitals and for small letters in separate cases; capitals were kept in the upper half of the type case and so became known as upper-case letters"

See also: capital uppercase

adjective

of or relating to a style of writing characterized by somewhat rounded capital letters; 4th to 8th centuries

adjective

uppercase; "capital A"; "great A"; "many medieval manuscripts are in majuscule script"

See also: capital great