Only if it's being used as a title.
No, unless "football team" is actually the name of the team. Delmar is capitalized, Delmar Wildcats is capitalized, Delmar football team is not.
In "Bachelor of Science in Business Administration," the terms "Bachelor," "Science," "Business," and "Administration" are capitalized. This capitalization follows standard conventions for academic degrees, emphasizing the formal title of the program. The prepositions "of" and "in" are not capitalized as they are not part of the main title.
Yes, the word "Team" should be capitalized when referring to the CBS Management Team, as it is part of the official title.
Yes, "Varsity Swim Team" should be capitalized as it is a proper noun referring to a specific team.
Yes, the "T" in "Team" should be capitalized in "Good afternoon Team" as it is a proper noun.
Yes, "Dear Team" should be capitalized when used as a greeting to address a group of individuals collectively.
The general noun "veteran", as in "Mary is a veteran" is not capitalized. "The Vietnam veterans marched in the parade". The word is capitalized when it is part of a title; an in Veterans' Day, or Veterans' Administration.
The term "administration building" should generally not be capitalized unless it is part of a specific name or title. For instance, you would capitalize it if referring to a specific building, like "the Administration Building at State University." In most other contexts, it should remain lowercase.
If it is the name of an organization, it is suppose to be capitalized.
It should be capitalized if it's the name of a specific team.
New York is a state. Yankees is the name for the team. All sports teams have the beginning of the team name capitalized. It's a proper noun.
Yes, "Yanks" should be capitalized when referring to the New York Yankees baseball team or when used as a slang term for Americans. In other contexts, it may not be capitalized.