It should be written as:
The Powerful Machi
ne o
n the Political Sce
ne
The articles, co
nju
nctio
ns a
nd prepositio
ns are
not capitalized i
n a title of a article.
Yes, "Article Three" should be capitalized when referring to a specific article in a legal document or a section of a constitution.
No, I read an article about scarlet fever, and it was not capitalized.
There is an article in wikipedia that shows the machine
Yes. The heading reads, "The Wall Street Journal".
A is not capitalized except at the beginning of the sentence because it is an article.
In movie titles, 'be' is capitalized. In other media it is optional.
It should only be capitalized if it is the beginning of a sentence, if is part of a proper noun, or if it is a word in the title of a book, article, movie, story, etc.
Yes. Words like Mom and Dad should be capitalized when there is no article to go with it (the, my).
All words in a title will be capitalized except articles (other than the first word in the title) and prepositions.
It's a rule that the pronoun, I is always capitalized simply because I is how you would address yourself. If yourname gets capitalized always so does the pronoun, I."A" can be capitalized too but only at the beginning of the sentence. It is an article. It doesn't represent a person'sname.
All words apart from conjunctions, prepositions and articles should be capitalized. The first and last word should be capitalized regardless of whether it falls into one of the above categories.
Article 126 of the election defines political activity of state employees.