If "Ladies Club" is a group name:
Although the Ladies Club met, no decision was made.
If not (it is just an unnamed club for ladies):
Although the ladies' club met, no decision was made.
You're writing for readers -- if you don't use proper punctuation, spelling, and grammar, they won't understand it.
A.B. Name
It is correct if you use the proper punctuation. For example, it is correct to say, "No, I never told Rick that you lied about where you were Tuesday night."
because people are to lazy to use the proper grammer and punctuation. What an appalling answer! It should read "Because people are too lazy to use correct grammar and punctuation."
No it would be more appropriate to use a period.
The proper punctuation would be to include an apostrophe after the word "ladies" to indicated possession by multiple women: "ladies' purses"
The proper punctuation is a period following each, because each is considered to be an abbreviation, but nowadays no punctuation at all is becoming acceptable.
"train" is correct - it doesn't require any capitalization or punctuation.
M.a
You're writing for readers -- if you don't use proper punctuation, spelling, and grammar, they won't understand it.
It depends entirely on the sentence that this phrase is in.
No. 'Decision' is not a proper noun. It is a noun--possibly an abstract noun.
A.B. Name
It should be --- How very happy he looks?
Sometimes you can't understand a sentence, if it doesn't have proper punctuation.
Spell things correctly, and always use proper grammar and punctuation.
Some common Braille punctuation marks include the period (.), comma (,), question mark (?), exclamation point (!), colon (:), semicolon (;), and quotation marks (" "). These symbols are used to convey proper punctuation in Braille text for individuals who are visually impaired.