As I recall, the rule for capitalizing titles is: Capitalize the first word, and every word that is not an article, conjunction, or short preposition. Through might be a preposition, but it is certainly not a short preposition, so if I have stated the rule correctly, 'through' deserves to be capitalized in a title.
Yes.
Generally speaking, the only words in a title that you do not capitalize are articles (a, an, the) and conjunctions (and, but, or). this can be a stylistic choice though.
I would capitalize all of them. Catch Me If You Can.
Yes.
Rule 4. Capitalize titles when they are used before names, unless the title is followed by a comma. Do not capitalize the title if it is used after a name or instead of a name.from grammarbook.com
no
A: No you do not
If you are writing something with a title, you would capitalize Happy Holiday Season in the title. If you are writing it in something other than a title, you would not capitalize it.
Yes, always capitalize a title.
Yes.
Yes, in a title you would typically capitalize all the major words, including "about," unless it is a short preposition like "of" or "in."
Generally speaking, the only words in a title that you do not capitalize are articles (a, an, the) and conjunctions (and, but, or). this can be a stylistic choice though.
No, you do not need to capitalize most small words in a title. Examples: Title: My Trip to Hawaii (not capitalized) Title: To John With Love (capitalized) (you could possibly not capitalize "with")
I would capitalize all of them. Catch Me If You Can.
If that is the course title, you do capitalize it.
yes
Yes