Yes. Only capitalize the name of an animal if it is the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
Chris = χρισ (all lower case letters)
You just write it after the name in all lower case letters: John Smith esq.
All these are upper case letters: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ All these are lower case letters: abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz
Scientific names are composed of the GENUS name, which is capitalized, and the species name, which is always lower case. The entire scientific name is ALWAYS underlined or italicized.
All prepositions, articles and conjunctions should be lower case.
Generally, billion is lower case. You would use an upper case if it starts a sentence, but normally leave all the letters in upper case. Sometimes, people like to capitalize a word for emphasis, but it is not necessary.
Your Caps Lock key lets you type all in CAPITALS. Turn it off (it's over on the left) to type in lower case.
Select the text that you want to change. From the font group of the home tab, click the "Change Case" tool button. Select "lower case" from the options. In older versions of Word, you will find the "change case" in the format->font menu and you can get there quickly by a right click on the selected text.
You have to name the animal first. :)
The letters Cc,Kk,Oo,Pp,Ss,Vv,Ww,Xx,Zz all look the same in both upper and lower case.
A choice of characters on a keyboard that can include all the numbers and letters (1 to 0 and a to z) is called alphanumeric. If the choice is case-sensitive, meaning that it makes a difference if you choose upper or lower case (capitals and small letters), lower case alphanumeric characters would not include capital letters. A list of alphanumeric characters excludes all the signs.
the best one is- ontheroad