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The word citizenship does not need to be capitalized unless part of a proper noun. For examples:

The woman sought citizenship in Australia.


The man was required to attend a class called Citizenship 101 before taking a test.

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Wiki User

9y ago
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Wiki User

13y ago

Not always - it depends how you use it. For example...

I live in a country called England.

Country and town planning regulations are restrictive.

Can you name a country that has no rivers?

How many countries are listed as independent nations by the UN?

I go to the Town & Country restaurant frequently.

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Wiki User

7y ago

Only if it's someone's name or the first word in a sentence. You only capitalize proper nouns like names of people and places. Citizenship should only be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence like this.

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Wiki User

6y ago

No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is

n

ot a proper

n

ou

n.


Yes

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Wiki User

15y ago

Yes, capitalize countries and nationalities.

I'm from France.

I'm French.

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Wiki User

10y ago

It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun.

Examples:

United Nations

The Nation (name of a weekly journal)

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Wiki User

11y ago

No, because it is

n

ot a proper

n

ou

n.

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Wiki User

11y ago

No, because it is

n

ot a proper

n

ou

n.

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Q: Should citizenship be capitalized in a sentence?
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