Capitals are used with nouns if they are the first word in a sentence or if they are a proper noun.
Yes, in English grammar, nouns are typically capitalized at the beginning of a sentence or in titles.
No, a comma does not require a capital letter after it in standard English punctuation rules. You only capitalize the first letter of a new sentence or proper noun.
Capital letters are generally used at the beginning of sentences, for proper nouns (names and titles), and for the pronoun "I." They are also used in acronyms and abbreviations.
no.
Yes, an exclamation mark is a type of full stop, so it should be followed by a capital letter. If the sentence is direct speech and followed by the words 'she exclaimed' or similar, it would be followed by a lower-case letter. 'She had the cheek to say that Peter was a thief! He soon put her right.' 'The car swerved up onto the pavement, narrowly missing my mother. "That car is going to crash into the wall!" she gasped.'
Yes, the first letter of the first word following closing quotation marks should typically be capitalized.
Only when it is used at the beginning of the sentence and when it is a proper noun. Examples. Aldrin The Jungle Book
Always put a capital letter on a proper noun
Capital letters are generally used at the beginning of sentences, for proper nouns (names and titles), and for the pronoun "I." They are also used in acronyms and abbreviations.
The two U.S. states beginning with the letter T are Tennessee and Texas. Austin is the capital city in Texas.
A capital letter
no.
The days of the week normally begin with a capital letter: Monday, Tuesday, and so on.
yes you are
· nuts · nachos
Put a capital letter in the beginning of the sentence .
If you're starting a sentence with a quote that does not start with a capital letter, you can put the first letter of the quote in brackets to indicate that it was not originally capitalized.
dear sir/madam