A generic dinosaur is uncapitaized, such as "brontosaurus." The only time to capitalize a dinosaur is if it had a proper name (such as "Jack the brontosaurus") or if it was named after a particular person or place (like "Piltdown Man").
If you are referring to a dinosaur using the proper binomial naming system used in science then there are a few rules to follow. The genus name comes first and is always capitalized. The species name comes second and is never capitalized and both names are italicized. As in the example Tyrannosaurus rex.
You don't if you are speaking generally like "velociraptor." When using the scientific name, you do.
Dinosaur names are capitalized because they are proper nouns.
Binomial nomenclatures, e.g. Tyrannosaurus rex, are always italicized. However, names for individual dinosaurs, e.g. "Rexy," are not.
Yes
Dinosaur names are typically capitalized when they refer to a specific genus or species, such as "Tyrannosaurus rex" or "Velociraptor mongoliensis." However, when referring to dinosaurs in a more general sense (e.g. "the carnivorous dinosaurs"), they are not capitalized.
You should capitalize it if it is a brand name.
Country is capitalized when it is used as part of a proper noun referring to a specific country or when it begins a sentence. For example, "I am traveling to the United States" or "Country music is popular in the southern states."
Yes. 'Sun' is its name and you capitalize it just as you capitalize anyone's name.
If its a name.
its a dinosaur it is the dinosaur with the longest name ever
Name of this semi-aquatic dinosaur is:- hadrosaur
The largest dinosaur name is Micropachycepahalosaurus. The shortest is Minmi.
No, but you capitalize the name of a biome.
You capitalize Apollo because it is a name.
we don't have any filipino name for dinosaur so it's just dinosaur
no you do not