No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is
n
ot a proper
n
ou
n. However, whe
n it is used as a part of a proper
nou
n the
n it should be capitalized.
Example:
Oxnard Lau
ndromat
No, according to English grammar and spelling rules, "laundromat" should not be capitalized. It is not a proper noun, so it should be written in lowercase.
The US English spelling is "organizing". The British English spelling is "organising".
The US English spelling is "plagiarized". The British English spelling is "plagiarised".
Vandalize (US English spelling) or Vandalise (British English spelling).
Only the word English is capitalized. History should not be capitalized. Example: English and history are the subjects that I love.
The correct US English spelling is "recognizable" (able to be recognized). The British English spelling is "recognisable".
Ja! -- The spelling of nationalities is capitalized in English, so the spelling is Swedish.
That is the correct English spelling (capitalized) of Bhangra, a dance form native to Punjab.
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun (capitalized), the country of Mongolia.
lavanderia a gettoni
The word in English for a teacher or educator is spelled "professor". (Capitalized before a proper name.)
It is honor in US English and honour in British English.
Only capitalize I (yo) at the beginning of a sentence.
That is the correct spelling of the plural noun "cavaliers" (horsemen). The capitalized form is used for the Royalists of the English Civil War, or the Cleveland NBA basketball team.
Never. The word E nglish is always capitalized because it is a proper nou n.
The English spelling is normally uncapitalized as schadenfreude. The German noun is capitalized, and the adjective form is schadenfroh.The term basically means "taking pleasure in the misfortune of others".
Beowulf is the Old English spelling of Beowulf.
When it refers to the language, it should always be capitalized.