When North, South, East, or West (or a combination of them) are capitalized in the middle of a sentence, it means that the writer is referring to a specific place. He/she is not just refering to a general direction.
"He is from the MiddleEast."
"Turn east in a few minutes."
When capitalized in the middle of a sentence, "South" is a proper noun. It refers to a specific region or direction, typically the southern part of a location.
The words "Barnes," "South," and "America" need to be capitalized in the sentence.
No, the term "south of France" should not be capitalized unless it is the beginning of a sentence. It is a common noun phrase referring to a geographical location.
No, "southward" is not capitalized unless it appears at the beginning of a sentence or in a title.
Yes, "South American jungle" should be capitalized in a sentence because it is a proper noun referring to a specific geographical region.
The words "north," "south," and "red river" all need to be capitalized in the sentence, "Do you live north or south of the Red River?"
yes
Yes, "South American jungle" should be capitalized in a sentence because it is a proper noun referring to a specific geographical region.
In general, the directions north, south, east, and west are not capitalized unless they are part of a proper noun or at the beginning of a sentence.
yes
The word 'southern' shouldn't be capitalized in a sentence unless it is a proper noun. For example, Southern France is capitalized because it is a proper noun and it is a region in France. Another example, southern star isn't capitalized because it could be referring to any star in the south.
Yes, it is written North Pole. It is capitalized because it is the name of a place. Names of specific places are proper nouns, which are always capitalized. So North Pole is capitalized just like New Hampshire, South Korea, Sahara Desert or Mississippi River.
Yes.
No, the word "south" should not be capitalized in the address "88 south 6th street." In addresses, directional words (like north, south, east, and west) are typically lowercase unless they are part of a formal street name.
The words "north," "south," and "red river" all need to be capitalized in the sentence, "Do you live north or south of the Red River?"
Unless this is the title of a book, movie, or song, the word finer would not be capitalized. The word Nothing is capitalized as the first word in the sentence, and South Carolina is a proper noun (a state). Of course, the song lyric is actually "Nothing could be finer than to be in Carolina" from the song "Carolina in the Morning" (1922).
All of them should be capitalized if they are at the beginning of a sentence. Drive, River, and Railroad would also be capitalized if they are part of proper nouns such as South Drive, Mississippi River, Edaville Railroad.
Yes, when referring to the specific geographic directions (North, South, East, West), they are capitalized. However, when used as general directions, they are not capitalized (e.g., go north on Main Street).