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The correct way to capitalize the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" is to capitalize the first letter of each word.
Yes, "Summer" should be capitalized when written as "Summer 2007" as it is part of the name of the season and is used as a proper noun in this context.
Wyoming should be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence or when referring to the state specifically as in "I visited Wyoming last summer."
You do not capitalize science fiction. If you look any word up in the dictionary, you will learn if it should be capitalized. The rule: Capitalize names of courses: Economics, Biology 101. (However, we would write: "I'm taking courses in biology and science fiction this summer.")
Complete predicate: can visit Pang only during a short time each summer Simple predicate: can visit
The correct way to capitalize the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" is to capitalize the first letter of each word.
No.
No, unless it is at the start of an sentence (In this case you capitalize only 'summer') or part of a title/name (Eg. Google Summer Internship).
YOU CAPITALIZE THINGS LIKE SPRING, SUMMER, AND WINTER WHEN YOU USE PERSONIFICATION.FOR EXAMPLE, As I was walking down the street, Winter came and blew away my hat.
Yes you should capitalize Summer and all other seasons, it's Grammer101
Yes.
Yes, you need to capitalize them.
If it's a key word in a title, or the first word of a title or part of a name of something, capitalize. Otherwise, don't.
Yes, "Summer" should be capitalized when written as "Summer 2007" as it is part of the name of the season and is used as a proper noun in this context.
TTThe Barnes family spent their summer in south America.
When the constitution was written during the summer of 1787, the Articles of Confeduration were still governing the United States.
When the constitution was written during the summer of 1787, the Articles of Confeduration were still governing the United States.