It should be capitalised if it precedes a personal name or is used alone, in place of a personal name.
For example:
It is Grandmother Annie, not grandmother Annie.
My Grandmother, my Dad, my Mother, my Brother, and so on, are all capitalised.
No, the word "grandson" should not be capitalized unless it begins a sentence or is part of a title.
It depends on the context: specifically, whether or not it is part of her name. For example, This is my grandmother, Mary.
or
This is Grandmother Mary.
Yes.
Example:
Grandson Joey
Yes
Yes, "Dr." should be capitalized when used as a title before a person's name in formal writing.
Yes, "Captain" should be capitalized when used as a title directly before a name, such as "Captain Smith."
Yes, "Doctor" should be capitalized when it is used as a title before a person's name, such as "Dr. Smith."
The word "Dean" should be capitalized when it is used as a title before a person's name, such as "Dean Smith." It should also be capitalized when referring to a specific dean, such as "Dean of Students."
Salutatorian should be capitalized when it is used as a title before a person's name, such as "Salutatorian Jane Smith." Otherwise, it is not capitalized.
No. Titles should be lower case when they are spelled out before a name (and are not at the beginning of a sentence). If titles are abbreviated, then they are capitalized. For example, Dr. Jones or doctor Jones. I hope that helped!
It should be capitalized if referring to a name or a title.
No it shouldn't be capitalized.
Occupations are not typically capitalized unless they are used as part of a title before a name (e.g., President Obama). Otherwise, they are usually written in lowercase (e.g., teacher, doctor).
It depends on the style guide you are following. In general, if you are using the term generically, it is not capitalized (e.g., "adjunct faculty members"). However, if you are using it as part of a formal title or specifically referring to a group or department, it may be capitalized (e.g., "Adjunct Faculty in the History Department").
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.
It should be capitalized when it forms part of a country name.
"defendant" should not be capitalized unless it is paired with a proper name.
Yes, the term "Oklahoma state agency" should be capitalized because it includes proper nouns.
The word "hospice" is not typically capitalized unless it is part of a proper noun or at the beginning of a sentence.
No it shouldn't be capitalized.