The Emergency Reserve is only used as a last resort after the Contingency Reserve has been exhausted to provide funding in the event of an unanticipated or unforeseen extraordinary nature such as costs related to a natural disaster, emergency or unexpected costs created by Federal or State legislation.
First and foremost: The decision to capitalize or not to capitalize is entirely up to the author. For the experienced author, "correct" grammar/punctuation is a set of guidelines rather than rules. For example, authors may choose to forgo periods, commas, or any other types of literary "stops" in order to introduce a rushed or confused tone. Or, as in this case, an author may use excessive capitalization in order to draw his/her audience to words/plot points he/she deems significant to the story. Before we get into the nitty-gritty of proper usages of capitalization however, a good general rule of thumb to remember is to capitalize any person, place, or thing that is of importance and specific, not general.
Start every sentence with a capital letter.
Of Mice & Men
My brother and I went to the movies.
I only like the icing on donuts.
Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
the Grand Canyon
the U.S. Constitution
the Big Bang theory
Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire
Buddha, Jesus, Allah
Capitalize the first letter of a sentence, proper nouns (names of people, places, and things), titles of books, movies, and songs, and the pronoun "I."
You can capitalize Japanese and Cherry but not tree
No, there is no need to capitalize 'nun' or 'nuns' in a sentence.
In "Yours truly," you capitalize the first letter of each word if you are using it as a complimentary close in a letter, as it is a formal sign-off.
If that is the course title, you do capitalize it.
No, you do not capitalize the second word in the complimentary closing.
In "Yours truly," you capitalize the first letter of each word if you are using it as a complimentary close in a letter, as it is a formal sign-off.
no, but you do capitalize mum
You capitalize the first A but not the last a.
In a list, you would typically capitalize the first word of each item, proper nouns, and the first word after a colon if it introduces a complete sentence.
No, you do not capitalize the word drama.
You capitalize Huntington
do you capitalize the word protestant
do you capitalize roaring twenties
When it is the name of a particular country, you capitalize it.
Capitalize challah bread
You would not capitalize it. cotton gin
yes, you do capitalize The Black Hills.