It doesn't need to be unless you're using it as a title.
My dad was a letter carrier also known as a postal carrier.
Letter Carrier LastName won an award for best postal service.
Yes it should be capitalized.
It is a fragment that shouldn't be capitalized or punctuated.
If the phrase junior (Jr) is at the end of a person's name, it is capitalized. As in Daniel Boorstin, Jr.
Depends. If the phrase is "Legislator Bill", then yes it has to be capitalized because there's a name after it. However, if the sentence is "The legislators met for an important meeting", then no, it doesn't have to be capitalized.
November would be the only part of this phrase that is capitalized. The correct way to write is is "mid-November." This is because the only part of the phrase that is a proper noun is the word November.
Always
There is no actual phrase, but you could probably use GhaDdAffiE. Each capitalized letter is the name of the string, in order.
Yes it should be capitalized.
The second word should not be capitalized
No, "restaurant" is not capitalized in the phrase "Chinese restaurant." The only word that should be capitalized is "Chinese" in this context.
Yes, "Yours truly" is typically capitalized at the end of a letter as it is considered an appropriate closing phrase.
Yes, countries are capitalized in Italian.Specifically, the first letter of ordinary nouns is not capitalized. But the first letter of proper nouns tends to be capitalized. Countries are proper nouns whose first letter is capitalized.
Accounts Payable should be capitalized if using the phrase as a proper noun. If not then it does not need to be capitalized.
The phrase "Martin Luther King Day" is correctly capitalized. Martin Luther King is a name so is automatically capitalized. Since it is a specific day, a holiday to be exact, day is also capitalized.
The possessive form of the compound noun letter carrier is letter carrier's.Example: Our house is the at end of the letter carrier's route.
No, the swimming strokes are generally not capitalized (expect when at the beginning of a sentence or phrase)
Yes