Yes, because it is a group of people designated by their name.
If "algebra 1 is a title or the beginning of a sentence, then it should be capitalised. If it is in a sentence, but not at the beginning, then it should not be capitalised.
by hand , genus should be capitalized
No. Diseases are generally not capitalised, unless they are at the start of a sentence or take their name from a person.
No. The word author is a common noun. It would only be capitalized as 1) the name of a book, play, or film 2) the first word in a sentence 3) a header on a list or table
Yes, "Counseling" should be capitalized when it is used as a specific term or part of a title, such as "Counseling Services." If it is used generically, such as "I am considering counseling," then it is not capitalized.
No, "algebra" would not be capitalized unless it is the first word in a sentence or part of a title (e.g., "Algebra 1 Class").
The term social studies teacher does not need to be capitalized because it's not a proper noun. I would say social studies teacher, because there are only three times you use a capital letter 1. The beginning of a sentence. 2. When the thing is a name. 3. When the thing is a place.
Unless they are part of a proper noun, (e.g. President Reagan, etc.), NONE of those are normally capitalized. In the case of earth and sun, it is not wrong to capitalize them, but in modern writing they usually are written in lowercase.
Please provide sentence 1 so that I can assist you with the necessary change.
New and Year should be capitalized but resolution should not.
No, the pronoun 'I' is always capitalized and the first word of a sentence is always capitalized. Also, 'born on 1992' is not correct; to be born 'on' a date means a specific date, such as June 1, 1992. The correct adverb is 'born in 1992', within the year.Correct: I was born in 1992.
Only #1 is grammatically incorrect, although the question itself is grammatically wrong. It should read "Which of the following sentences is grammatically right." There is more than one sentence so it needs to be "sentences", not "sentence". Number 1 is wrong: it should be "This will remain between you and me" The object of the preposition "between" needs an accusitive form. Number 3 is also wrong, but it is not grammatically wrong. "Lays" is a transitive verb; you need the intransitive "lies" so the sentence should say "He lies on the couch" That is an error in vocabulary, not grammar. As well, the "i" in number 2 and the "he" in number 3 should be capitalized. Capitalization is not grammar.