Anytime you are referring to the holiday or the tradition, Thanksgiving and Thanksgiving Day are always capitalized. Examples: Will you be working the Thanksgiving Day holiday? I bought a Thanksgiving floral arrangement for my mother. There are a few instances when the word thanksgiving is not capitalized. If the use does not refer to the holiday or the Thanksgiving tradition, it is not capitalized. For example: Will you please offer a prayer of thanksgiving?
At the beginning of a sentence and when it forms part of the proper noun. Example: Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade
The names of events are capitalized because these are proper nouns. Examples: Christmas Thanksgiving Day
Canadian Thanksgiving is celebrated on a different day from the one America uses as its Thanksgiving Day.
You could say "holiday," but there isn't a specific common noun for Thanksgiving.
It depends. The country name, Turkey, should always be capitalized. The animal, turkey, is a simple noun and should only be capitalized at the start of a sentence.
It was Thanksgiving Day, so Sheila had to get up early to cook.
It is only capitalized if it is part of a name (Eg, Larry's Day Care) or at the start of the sentence; in this case you only capitalize 'day' and not 'care'.
"Thanksgiving Day always occurs on a Thursday."
of course dummy!!!! You just capitalized it in your sentence too!!!
Nope, unless you want it to, or it's in a title.
Do you plan to serve turkey at Thanksgiving.