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There is no such thing as a law letter. A noun should be capitalized if it is used as a proper noun.
It is a proper noun.A proper nouns is a specific name of a place , a person, or a thing. The first letter of a proper noun is always represented by a capital letter.
Nouns that should always be capitalized are the first letter of each word of a proper noun (the name of a person, place, thing, or a title), the first letter of the first word in a sentence, and the letters of acronyms (such as IBM or NASA).
A proper noun is the name given to a particular person, place, animal or thing. A proper Noun always begins with a capital letter.
Yes, the Burj Khalifa is a proper noun and should be capitalized. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title. The Burj Khalifa is the name of a building, a thing.
Yes, "Stefan" is a proper noun because it is a specific name for a person, place, or thing. It always starts with a capital letter.
The musical Wicked is a proper noun. All proper nouns should be capitalised.
"Lionel" is a proper noun because it is the name of a specific person or thing.
The U.S. Army is a thing. U.S. Army is a proper noun and should be capitalized.
It depends on the context. Generally, if the second proper noun is an integral part of the first one (e.g., "the New York Times"), then you would use the definite article. If they are separate entities being combined (e.g. "Toyota Camry"), you might not need to use the definite article.
If the word after more importantly is a proper noun, then it should be capitalized. Example: More importantly, Raizza should be there first thing in the morning. More importantly, the guests should be there first thing in the morning.
In Chinese, proper nouns such as the names of people, places, and companies are capitalized just like in English. However, overall, Chinese characters do not use capital letters in the same way that English does. Instead, Chinese relies on different characters and punctuation marks to convey sentence structure and emphasis.