Girlfriend, boyfriend, wife, husband, fiance, etc are all common nouns and don't require capitalization. If you're referring to a specific relationship like "Bennifer," then it's a proper noun and you capitalize it.
Yes.
Capitalization is determined by whether a word is a noun or a proper noun. Do not capitalize robin or deer, they are nouns, not proper nouns.
The nouns in your sentence are group, nouns, and sentence.
The common nouns for the proper noun Pasig River are river and waterway.Note: Always capitalize a proper noun, Pasig River, the name of a specific river.
Dutch does not capitalize all nouns like German does. In Dutch, only proper nouns are capitalized, while common nouns are not capitalized unless they appear at the beginning of a sentence.
Yes! Capitalize all proper nouns, including cities.
No.
Any word you capitalize is considered a proper noun, and all of the others are common nouns, so yes. An example of a proper noun would be Jacob, or Bolivia, or Oreo. Common nouns would be name, or country, or brand.
In a list, you would typically capitalize the first word of each item, proper nouns, and the first word after a colon if it introduces a complete sentence.
Yes, the name "Stegosaurus" should be capitalized as it is a proper noun referring to a specific genus of dinosaur.
No, the word "science" is a common noun. Proper nouns are capitalized.
Yes, you would capitalize Twitter, since it is a proper noun. All proper nouns are capitalized.
Girlfriend, boyfriend, wife, husband, fiance, etc are all common nouns and don't require capitalization. If you're referring to a specific relationship like "Bennifer," then it's a proper noun and you capitalize it.
Yes, you should capitalize "Fall of 2008" when referring to the season in a specific year because "Fall" is a proper noun denoting the season and "2008" is a specific year.
Yes, "Freshman" is typically capitalized when referring to a first-year student in college or high school.
Languages should be capitalized when they are used as proper nouns or adjectives, such as "Spanish literature" or "English grammar." Generally, languages are not capitalized when used generically, such as "I am learning French" or "She speaks three languages."