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They enjoyed the ice cream cones DOES IT NEED THE CAPILIZATION

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12y ago
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11y ago

At the beginning of a sentence and when it forms part of the proper noun

Examples:

Queen Anna

Queen Elizabeth

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11y ago

Queen is capitalized when it is part of somebody's name, such as Queen Elizabeth II.

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11y ago

Yes Queen should be capitalized.

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Q: When do you capitalize queen?
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Related questions

Do you capitalize queen in a sentence?

You do if it is part of someone's name, such as Queen Elizabeth II or Queen Anne. If you're just saying "the queen was crowned on June 14, 1775," then you don't capitalize it.


When do you capitalize homecoming queen?

If it's at the beginning of a sentence.


Do you capitalize mother?

no, but you do capitalize mum


Do you capitalize the a in America?

You capitalize the first A but not the last a.


What do you capitalize in a list?

In a list, you would typically capitalize the first word of each item, proper nouns, and the first word after a colon if it introduces a complete sentence.


Do you capitalize drama?

No, you do not capitalize the word drama.


What do you capitalize in-- they were talking about the huntington sisters?

You capitalize Huntington


Do you capitalize the roaring twenties?

do you capitalize roaring twenties


Do you capitalize the word planetarium?

do you capitalize the word protestant


When do you capitalize country?

Country is capitalized when it is used as part of a proper noun referring to a specific country or when it begins a sentence. For example, "I am traveling to the United States" or "Country music is popular in the southern states."


When do you capitalize challah bread?

Capitalize challah bread


Would you capitalize the word pharaoh in a sentence?

I believe it's more like Mom and my mom. When you are directly referring the person it would be capitalized. For example: "I said hi to Mom today." "I said hi to your mom today." If you're referring to the literal person named "Mom" it would be considered a proper noun, you're name for that particular person is "Mom". Same for the word "pharaoh". "I asked Pharaoh about the famine." "Should I ask the pharaoh about the famine?" "Pharaoh" is a title, not unlike "captain" or "commander". If you were to say: "I asked the captain why the boat was headed for the iceberg", you wouldn't capitalize "captain". If you said "I asked Captain Smith why the boat was headed for the iceberg", you would capitalize "Captain". On the other hand (and this is where it gets sticky), if your audience knows that you are referring to a specific person with a specific title (the Queen, for example, meaning Queen Elizabeth II), then I would capitalize it. If you're just referring to any old queen in a generic sense, you wouldn't capitalize it.