Title of a book, capitalize both words. If not, then "the" and "vampire" are neither capitalized because one is an article and the other is an adjective describing the bat.
Yes It depends are you talking about vampire bats or VAMPYRES (everybody spells vampyres wrong) If vampyres, then capitalize. If not, no
no i dont think so vampire is describing the bat so it's like an adjective.
The answer to this is the climactic moment in the film Nosferatu. In this version Nina Harker (nee Murray) reads in the book of the vampire that all it takes is to leave one's window open and 'invite' the vampire in.
Isabella (Bella) Swan/Cullen : Average human girl. In Love with a Vampire. Later she is changed to a Vampire. Edward Cullen : Vampire. Reads Minds. Renesmee Cullen: Bella and Edward's Half-Human, Half-Vampire child. Can Communicate through touch. Jacob Black: Werewolf. Loves Bella. Imprints on Renesmee.
There are a number of sites to find out information about female vampires, given the recent popularity in vampire movies and books. Sites such as wikipedia, gods and monsters, vampire website and good reads all have information of this nature.
"The Vampire Chronicles" by Anne Rice is a popular vampire series that follows the lives of immortals. Another good vampire series is "The Black Dagger Brotherhood" by J.R. Ward, which combines romance and paranormal elements in its storytelling.
In the common sense, the vampire model is described with these characteristic features: (s)he... - lives in the night, sleeps during the day - has no shadow - drinks blood - beautiful and venomous - fears from garlic - fears from crucifix and christian religion - is burnt by silver - is burnt in sunlight - lives forever - reads your thoughts However, a vampire only need to have a majority of these characteristics to be a vampire. For example, if all of those characteristics are met, but instead of being "beautiful and venomous" is "ugly and non-venomous", it would still be a vampire.
The answer to this is the last ability learned by the psychic vampire - the ultimate stage of the vampyre condition. A description of such can be found in the story 'The Shunned House' by H.P. Lovecraft. The means is poorly understood but one description reads 'Open all, become vacant. Reach, extends, envelop and embrace. The warm will flow the heat will come the the frost will melt...'
Yes, "reads" is a word. A simple sentence containing the word "reads" is, "David reads the text on the screen."
The term for a word or sentence that reads the same in both directions is "palindrome."
The first sentence implies a general request for a man who reads, while the second sentence specifically requests a man who reads. The addition of "a" in the second sentence emphasizes the singularity and specificity of the man being sought.
Palindrome
Yes, it is. Capitalization occurs when the word is a proper noun (meaning it's a specific name, in common English). If you wanted to capitalize Sheet, you must also capitalize "prewrite" so that the sentence reads: "Complete the Prewrite Sheet tonight." Then "Prewrite Sheet" becomes the title of the sheet itself, whereas just plain "sheet" is a simple noun and should not be isolated in capitalization.