Yes, if it's part of the name. "I attend the Hawthorne School." If the word "school" is not used as a proper noun, then don't capitalize it. "I will be late for school today."
yes
No. It's not necessary. Capitalize it when it forms part ot the proper noun. Example: UST School of Medicine
No you don't capitalize university unless you have the name of the university, like University of Texas. It's the same way if you say school you only capitalize school if you add the name of the school afterwards, such as Woodland school.
Yes, becauseit is a proper n ou n. Example: Lourdes School of Makati Harvard University
You don't capitalize it except if it is the beginning of a sentence
Most texts would capitalize Sunday and School but not the word teacher. Traditionally, Sunday School has been capitalized because it is regarded as a title of an institution.
It depends on the context. If you were to use it like: "I am in the wrong school district." then it would not. But if you said: "School District 957 needs to be widened." then it would. So if it is a title, yes; and if it is just a noun, no.
In general, it is not necessary to capitalize "school of medicine" unless it is part of a proper noun like "Harvard Medical School."
Yes, it should be---- Licensed Practical Nursi ng School.
you HAVE to capitalize father because when i was in school the teachers said you need to capitalize dates, monthes, days, all that stuff you do u have to capitalize it because you need to show repect to the father by capitalizing
I capitalize it. Bible is usually capitalized anyway.
No, "dental school" is not capitalized unless it is part of a specific proper noun, such as the name of a school like "Harvard School of Dental Medicine."