The names of the seasons are not proper nouns and therefore do not take an initial capital.
'I'm planning to move house after the winter.'
'It's been a long, hard winter this year.'
When it is at the beginning of a sentence, or at the end of a letter. I don't see it capitalized anywhere else.
The next word should be capitalized.
It depends on the context. In letters or notes, it should be capitalized at the end.
It depends on the context. If you are quoting mid-sentence and the quote wasn't the end of your sentence then the next word shouldn't be capitalized.
I am in home, dear. "dear" is not capitalized when at the end of a sentence.
Yes, a common noun that begins a sentence is always capitalized. The capital letter at the beginning and the period at the end are the markers that identify each individual sentence.
Yes, you should always punctuate a sentence that ends with a citation in a works cited. Use the appropriate punctuation mark (usually a period) to end the sentence before the citation.
In most cases this is interpreted as referring to the planet. The planet Earth should always be capitalized. If you are referring to soil, earth does not need to be capitalized.
No, "BA" is typically used as an acronym and does not require punctuation. However, if it is used as part of a sentence, appropriate punctuation should be included at the end of the sentence.
The mistake in the sentence is the lack of a question mark at the end. Since it is a question asking about who was seen at the party, it should be punctuated correctly as: "Who did you see at the party?" Additionally, "who" should be capitalized at the beginning of the sentence.
no because it is not named after a person or place, such as German Shepard. Poodle is named after a German word.
If the phrase junior (Jr) is at the end of a person's name, it is capitalized. As in Daniel Boorstin, Jr.