The correct grammar would be "I visited the Taj Mahal last weekend." Remember to capitalize proper nouns like "Taj Mahal" and use the past simple tense "visited" for actions completed in the past.
You capitalize proper nouns.
You can capitalize Japanese and Cherry but not tree
No, there is no need to capitalize 'nun' or 'nuns' in a sentence.
In "Yours truly," you capitalize the first letter of each word if you are using it as a complimentary close in a letter, as it is a formal sign-off.
Yes, Labor Day is the name of a specific day, which makes it a proper noun, so it is capitalized.
I think that would be determined by the context in which that phrase was used. If you were writing something like, "We had a picnic during the Memorial Day weekend," then it would be a lowercase "w." But if it was a title like, "Memorial Day Weekend Sale," then it would be capitalized.
In "Yours truly," you capitalize the first letter of each word if you are using it as a complimentary close in a letter, as it is a formal sign-off.
no, but you do capitalize mum
If it is not the title of a book, movie, etc., then no. You would only capitalize Indians, since it is a cultural term.The cowboys of the old west fought with Native American Indians.I liked watching cowboy and Indian movies.The Cowboys played a game last weekend. (Team name is capitalized.)
You capitalize the first A but not the last a.
You capitalize proper nouns.
No, you do not capitalize the word drama.
You can't say "At the Weekend", it's not proper english. You can say "on the weekend" if you mean, for example, "we can't go to Disneyland today, but maybe on the weekend we can."
You capitalize Huntington
do you capitalize roaring twenties
do you capitalize the word protestant