Yes, as it is a job title.
---> No.. world is never capitalized unless at the beginning of a sentence or in the title of something.
No, unless it is being used as part of a title or the start of a sentence.
Since the word 'term' is a common noun, you only capitalize it if at the start of a sentence or part of a name/title.
It should only be capitalized if it forms part of a title or is at the beginning of a sentence.
It should be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence and when it forms part of a title.
No, the term "real estate broker" is not typically capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
No, the word lunch is not capitalized in a sentence. You would only capitalize it if it was part of a title (e.g. it was a word in a book title).
When it appears at the beginning of a sentence, or in the title of something. There is no other reason to capitalize it.
You capitalize Judge Smith. You do not need to capitalize retired as it is not part of his title.
You only capitalize the 'p' in 'provincial if it is at the start of a sentence or part of a name/title.
Not unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or is part of a title.
When it's at the beginning of a sentence or forms part of a title.
Yes, you do capitalize the word "geography" because it is part of the title.
Yes, but as it is a title, I would also capitalize it as 'The Dribblers'.
Not normally, estate needs to be capitalized only when it's used in a title (The Class Estate by Gene Moore), the name of something (The Estate Sale Store), or a specifically titled estate (the Van Morrison Estate). If you use it in terms such as 'my estate', 'let's go to the estate sale', or 'there's a large estate next to the cemetery', you don't capitalize.
---> No.. world is never capitalized unless at the beginning of a sentence or in the title of something.
Only when it is the first word in a sentence or is part of something's name or title.