Science is only capitalised if at the beginning of a sentence, or in a subject name such as the Science Foundation or a Science Laboratory.
It should only be capitalized if it is a full title. For example, I'm attending Computer Science 101 tomorrow.
You do not capitalize science fiction. If you look any word up in the dictionary, you will learn if it should be capitalized. The rule: Capitalize names of courses: Economics, Biology 101. (However, we would write: "I'm taking courses in biology and science fiction this summer.")
Yes, always if you are talking about a specific star. (i am an earth science teacher)
You would capitalize "science" only if it is the first word in the sentence. Examples: Science is my niece's favorite subject. Ralph was always quick to answer, with answers not based in science.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is n ot a proper n ou n.
Yes, it is the proper name of a branch of science.
You do not captitalize "science", but you should capitalize when it's in the form of "Science 30".
Yes, you always capitalize all parts of a subject name.
Yes, capitalize Bachelor of Arts.
Simple answer? Yes.
yes
It depends on where you put it in a sentence. Of coarse in the beginning of a sentence you capitalize space but by it's self no you don't capitalize.
No 'father of modern science' shouldn't be capitalized.
Yes, always if you are talking about a specific star. (i am an earth science teacher)
You do not capitalize science fiction. If you look any word up in the dictionary, you will learn if it should be capitalized. The rule: Capitalize names of courses: Economics, Biology 101. (However, we would write: "I'm taking courses in biology and science fiction this summer.")
No, the word "science" is a common noun. Proper nouns are capitalized.
First of all it is 'Batchelor of Science' not 'Batchelor's of Science'. Normally you would shorten it to 'BSc'.
You would capitalize "science" only if it is the first word in the sentence. Examples: Science is my niece's favorite subject. Ralph was always quick to answer, with answers not based in science.