Yes, always begin a sentence with a capitalized letter and end with a period.
Yes, in English grammar, the first letter of a sentence is always capitalized. This rule helps to distinguish the beginning of a new sentence and aids in easy readability and understanding of written text.
Every sentence begins with a capital letter.
No, "homework" does not need a capital letter unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or used in a title.
The first word of a new sentence should always be capitalized.
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.
"Holiday" should start with a capital letter when it is used as the first word in a sentence or as a proper noun, such as "Christmas holiday."
no. only the first letter should be in capital
The pronoun "I" is always capitalized. All other pronouns are capitalized only when the first word in a sentence.
No, "homework" does not need a capital letter unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or used in a title.
The first word of a new sentence should always be capitalized.
Every sentence begins with a capital letter.
A capitol of a country needs a capital on the first letter.
Unless it is the first word in a sentence. Otherwise - no capital letter
The first letter of a person's name is always a capital letter.
The first letter of summer is not capitalized unless it is the first letter of a sentence or part of a title, et ecetera.
The first word of a sentence must start with a capital letter. There are millions of ways to start a sentence!
No. Cauliflower cheese is not a proper noun and only the word cauliflower would have a capital on the first letter if it started a sentence.
It is axiomatic that a sentence starts with a capital letter for the first word and ends with a full stop.