I would capitalize all of them. Catch Me If You Can.
In normal use, you would not capitalize it. It there are specific instances when it is used as a title that it would be correct to capitalize it. The Catholic Missionary Church was located in Nairobi.
If you are talking about something with the title of gold, silver or iron like a book or a film then, yes, you would capitalize it but if you are only talking about the metal then, no, you wouldn't.
Talking about an unidentified chief I would not capitalize the word, but if I was using it as a title of a specific person, such as Chief Wiggum, I would capitalize it.
That would depend on the type of essay. Say, an essay for a presentation, yes, you would. Any public essay is one you would capitilize the title. Ex: The History of Mr. Guy Source from- Yuri Veshielshikove
Never had to use it in a title, but I would say no. I would be tempted to spell it out, though to where it'd be versus ~rainingcoconuts
Yes, in a title you would typically capitalize all the major words, including "about," unless it is a short preposition like "of" or "in."
In a title, you should capitalize all words except for articles (a, an, the), coordinating conjunctions (and, but, or, nor), and prepositions (in, on, to, with) unless they are the first or last word of the title. Therefore, you would capitalize "Your" in a title.
Yes, you should capitalize proper nouns such as "Happy Holiday Season." This helps to distinguish them from regular words or phrases.
I think so
In normal use, you would not capitalize it. It there are specific instances when it is used as a title that it would be correct to capitalize it. The Catholic Missionary Church was located in Nairobi.
If you are talking about something with the title of gold, silver or iron like a book or a film then, yes, you would capitalize it but if you are only talking about the metal then, no, you wouldn't.
No, the word lunch is not capitalized in a sentence. You would only capitalize it if it was part of a title (e.g. it was a word in a book title).
The correct way to capitalize the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" is to capitalize the first letter of each word.
"The Three Bunnies" if it is a title
No, you would not capitalize "grammar," "phonetics," and "linguistics" unless they are part of the official title of a specific course or program, such as: "Introduction to Grammar."
Yes, you should capitalize the word "to" in a title unless it is a preposition, article, or conjunction.
Yes, but as it is a title, I would also capitalize it as 'The Dribblers'.