The prince is expected to arrive shortly.
A king's son is known as a prince.
finds a prince
Prince shouldn't be capitalized in this sentence. It should only be capitalized if it directly precedes the name of the prince.
"If the king and prince own different carriages" is not a sentence, it is a sentence fragment, an incomplete thought.The sentence, "The king and prince own different carriages." is a complete thought, a statement. The conjunction "if" introduces a conditional clause. By removing "if", the phrase is not conditional, it is a complete thought (sentence).This sentence can be correctly completed by replacing nouns with the following pronouns (in bold):"He and the prince own different carriages.""The king and he own different carriages.""They own different carriages.""The king and prince own them."
Prince George will be the successor to the throne.
The Prince gives Romeo the punishment of Banishment.
Yes, the word "prince" should be capitalized when referring to a specific person's title or name, for example, Prince William.
The Prince banishes Romeo from Verona for killing Tybalt.
Example sentence - The prince made an abortive attempt to rescue the fair maiden.
The prince has a lot of prints that he printed (iI don't know I know it's dumb)
last week the prince used a hair curler in front of three million people also, a sentence for princess is that princess is NOT a pure-blood princess, she is a half-blood princess
the queen and prince lived happily in a kingdom