If 'the' is part of the official name of the newspaper then it should be included in your style of punctuation for the title. Otherwise, it shouldn't be.
It is not necessary to capitalize or italicize the word "the" before the titles of newspapers when used in a sentence. Just treat it like any other article in the sentence.
Yes, "Christmas Eve" should be capitalized in a sentence as it is a proper noun referring to the night before Christmas Day.
No, you do not need to capitalize job titles in a sentence if a person's name is not associated with it. Job titles are only capitalized when used directly before or as part of a person's name.
Not unless a proper noun follows the semi-colon. The parts before and after the semi-colon are part of the same sentence. You do not capitalize in the middle of a sentence unless it is a proper noun.
Yes, "son" should be capitalized in the sentence "Your son Khalil is 9" because it is a proper noun when used as a title before someone's name.
"Chaplain" is capitalized when it is used as part of a specific title before a name (e.g., Chaplain Smith) or at the beginning of a sentence. Otherwise, it is lowercase.
When its at the begining of a sentence, when its a name, or if the word EVIL is before it.
Yes, "Christmas Eve" should be capitalized in a sentence as it is a proper noun referring to the night before Christmas Day.
No, you do not need to capitalize job titles in a sentence if a person's name is not associated with it. Job titles are only capitalized when used directly before or as part of a person's name.
Not unless a proper noun follows the semi-colon. The parts before and after the semi-colon are part of the same sentence. You do not capitalize in the middle of a sentence unless it is a proper noun.
Yes, "son" should be capitalized in the sentence "Your son Khalil is 9" because it is a proper noun when used as a title before someone's name.
"Chaplain" is capitalized when it is used as part of a specific title before a name (e.g., Chaplain Smith) or at the beginning of a sentence. Otherwise, it is lowercase.
No, you would underline or italicize a painting, or a work of art. (you would underline it if you were writing but if you were typing, you should italicize it.)According to MLA formatting, paintings and major works are either underlined or italicized. Smaller works -- such as photographs -- require only quotation marks.but the correct answer for this question is put theses things in a quotation mark setting.
Yes, job titles such as Chiropractor are typically capitalized when used before a person's name in a sentence. For example, "Chiropractor Smith will see you now."
Yes, you should capitalize "room" when referring to a specific room before the room number. For example: Room 101.
Yes, the word "pharaoh" should be capitalized if it is used as a title before the name of a specific ruler, regardless of its position in a sentence. For example, "Pharaoh Ramses II ruled Egypt."
Yes.
leave it normal and put this before the word. "[Tilt head slightly to the right]"