The only pronoun that is always capitalized is the first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun 'I'. Other pronouns are capitalized only when they are the first word in a sentence. These rules apply to text within quotation marks or without quotation marks.
Yes, the first letter of the first word following closing quotation marks should typically be capitalized.
Capitalize the first letter of a quotation when the quotation is a complete sentence or directly follows a colon. If the quotation is in the middle of a sentence and does not stand alone as a complete thought, the first letter is not capitalized.
No, the word after the end of a quotation is not capitalized unless it is a proper noun or the first word of a new sentence.
You should only capitalize the first word in a quotation if you are quoting from the start of a line, or if the first word is a name. For example, if I were to quote myself, "You should only capitalize the first word in a quotation...". This is quoting from the start of a sentence, so the first word is capitalized. However, "capitalize the first word of a quotation..." does not start at the beginning of the sentence, so it doesn't need to be capitalized.
The first word in a sentence, in a direct quotation, and in a line of poetry is capitalized.
...a complete sentence on its own. If the direct quotation is integrated into the sentence and not a standalone sentence, then the first letter does not need to be capitalized.
Yes, you should always capitalize the first letter of a direct quote. Do not forget to include quotation marks before and after the quote either.
Not necessarily, if it is the start of a sentence or if it is a word that is usually capitalised, you would. But if it is a quote and you start say in the middle of the sentence then you don't.
The only pronoun that is always capitalized is the first person, singular, subjective, personal pronoun 'I'. Other pronouns are capitalized only when they are the first word in a sentence. These rules apply to text within quotation marks or without quotation marks.
Yes, the first letter of the first word following closing quotation marks should typically be capitalized.
Capitalize the first letter of a quotation when the quotation is a complete sentence or directly follows a colon. If the quotation is in the middle of a sentence and does not stand alone as a complete thought, the first letter is not capitalized.
No, the word after the end of a quotation is not capitalized unless it is a proper noun or the first word of a new sentence.
You should only capitalize the first word in a quotation if you are quoting from the start of a line, or if the first word is a name. For example, if I were to quote myself, "You should only capitalize the first word in a quotation...". This is quoting from the start of a sentence, so the first word is capitalized. However, "capitalize the first word of a quotation..." does not start at the beginning of the sentence, so it doesn't need to be capitalized.
The first 'c' should be capitalized.
No they shouldn't be capitalized.
The word 'will' should be capitalized only when it is a person's name or the first word in a sentence. As a verb or common noun, it should not be capitalized.