Capitalize federal or state when used as part of an official agency name or in government documents where these terms represent an official name. If they are being used as general terms, you may use lowercase letters.
No, because it is
n
ot a proper
nou
n.
At the beginning of a sentence and when it forms part of the proper noun.
Example:
Michigan State University
No,
unless it is being used as a proper noun like "State Government" or "Federal Government"No, not unless you use it after the name of the state or as "State of California" or California State, but just "state" is not a proper nound.
no
No.
The word 'will' should be capitalized only when it is a person's name or the first word in a sentence. As a verb or common noun, it should not be capitalized.
As an abbreviation it should be capitalized.
Yes, Greek should be capitalized.
No it shouldn't be capitalized.
No.
"The" should be capitalized because it is the begining of a sentance. "Hawaii" should be capitalized because it is the name of a state.
Yes, the sentence is correctly capitalized. The word "State" is capitalized because it is a proper noun when referring to Hawaii as a U.S. state.
The word 'will' should be capitalized only when it is a person's name or the first word in a sentence. As a verb or common noun, it should not be capitalized.
Yes, "State Senator" should be capitalized when used as a title before a person's name in a sentence, such as "State Senator Smith attended the meeting."
Yes, Sunday should always be capitalized.
The second word should not be capitalized
As an abbreviation it should be capitalized.
In what ways is the the word "statehood" capitalized?
No, the word "smartphone" should not be capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence.
No, the word "epitaph" should not be capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.
The word "banker" should not be capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title.