No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.
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.
Capitalize the first word in a sentence. Capitalize proper nouns, such as the names of people and places. Capitalize the pronoun "I." Capitalize the first word of a quote. Capitalize days of the week, months, and holidays. Capitalize the titles of books, movies, and songs. Capitalize the first, last, and important words in titles.
Not unless the word "on" begins a sentence. "On" is a preposition. In titles, prepositions should not be capitalized.
It is not necessary to capitalize pronouns in titles unless they are at the beginning of the title.
Yes, the word "observance" should be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence or in titles.
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.
No. it's not necessary.
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."
No. You capitalize titles and proper nouns, but you treat a quote as you would any written sentence.
Not unless the word "on" begins a sentence. "On" is a preposition. In titles, prepositions should not be capitalized.
Yes. It is one of the titles associated with Mary, so it does get capitalized as Blessed Virgin.
In this sentence, the word bylaws should not be capitalized.
Capitalize titles in writing and grammar when they come before a person's name, as in "President Lincoln." However, do not capitalize titles when they are used generically, like "the president announced a new policy."
The titles "Employee" and "Customer" are capitalized when they are used as part of a formal title or as a specific identifier, such as "Employee of the Year" or "Customer Service Representative." In other contexts where they are used generically, they are typically not capitalized.
Nope!
No, 'to' shouldn't be capitalized.
No.
because it's boss