Depends on whether you are talking about the place or the entity. The place you'd go on vacation would be the state of Wisconsin, but you pay your taxes to The State of Wisconsin.
Wisconsin was not a slave state.
Madison is the state capitol of Wisconsin.
That state is Wisconsin.
Wisconsin is the 30th state in the USA.
Wisconsin became a US territory following the American Revolution. Settlers were attracted to the territory's mining, lumber and dairy industries. Wisconsin was admitted to the Union in 1848, becoming the 30th US state.
Yes. It should be Peachy State.
yes
Yes you should.
It should be capitalized if you are referring to a specific state government but not when you're referring to state governments in general.
Antigo Silt Loam is the official state soil of Wisconsin. The Wisconsin State Legislature named it the official state soil of Wisconsin in 1983.
The Wisconsin state flag is a background of blue with the state coat of arms. There is a sailor and a miner holding a shield. On the top is the state motto "Forward". Below it is a badger which is the state animal. It has 1848 on it which is the year that Wisconsin became a state.
You capitalize the "s" for state when you referring to a specific state or state agency; State of Texas or State of Maine or The State Dept. of Health. You don't capitalize the "s" when the word state is used in general terms; the states with the largest population or the western most state.
Wisconsin was not a slave state.
There are 47 State Parks in the state of Wisconsin. Wisconsin also has 13 State Forests and 31 State Fishery Areas.
No, Wisconsin was the 30th state. Mississippi was the 20th state.
The state number of Wisconsin is the 30th
Capitalize the word state only when it appears after a state's name, as in "We will travel to Washington State this summer." (But make sure it won't be confused with a visit to the university known as Washington State. Perhaps "state of Washington" would be better.) In the phrase "state of Hawaii," you don't capitalize the word state. Finally, don't capitalize the word state when it's being used as a substitute for the state's name, as in "My father works for the state." It is capitalized, however, in imaginative names such as "the Nutmeg State," "the Empire State," "the Aloha State," and we capitalize "States" when we say things like "We're returning to the States after twenty years in Europe."