The word capitalize (capitalise) is not a noun it's a verb: capitalize, capitalizes, capitalizing, capitalized. To capitalize is to use upper case letters; to convert into capital or to compute the present value of financial resources.
The noun form is capitalization.
The word capitalize (capitalise) is not a noun it's a verb: capitalize, capitalizes, capitalizing, capitalized. To capitalize is to use upper case letters; to convert into capital or to compute the present value of financial resources. The noun form is capitalization.
no
Yes, you capitalize "the" when it is part of a proper noun or title.
Only if animal is proper noun. For instance, you would capitalize Chris Carter's nickname Animal and you would capitalize Animal from The Muppet Show. You wouldn't capitalize stuffed animal, it's not a proper noun.
no, it is a common noun
Always. It is a proper noun.
When its a proper noun
The proper adjective for the proper noun Shakespeare(always capitalize a proper noun) is Shakespearean (always capitalize a proper adjective).
Capitalize the word "to" in a title if it is the first or last word, a proper noun, or a verb.
The "Texas State Government" is a noun, and it is proper to capitalize it. Just as you would capitalize the name of a person.
Capitalization is determined by whether a word is a noun or a proper noun. Do not capitalize robin or deer, they are nouns, not proper nouns.
You only capitalize it if it is part of a proper noun. The FBI is the Federal Bureau of Investigation.