Dude yes go back to kindergarten its called pronouns preschooler
No, you do not need to capitalize each diagnosis when using more than one in a sentence. Simply separate each diagnosis with a comma. For example: The patient was diagnosed with schizophrenia, depression, and anxiety.
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
only if you put quotation markes on each side
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.
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.
The correct way to capitalize the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" is to capitalize the first letter of each word.
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
Capitalization and punctuation are optional when using single words or phrases in bulleted form. If each bullet or numbered point is a complete sentence, capitalize the first word and end each sentence with proper ending punctuation. The rule of thumb is to be consistent. Use a colon instead of a semicolon between two sentences when the second sentence explains or illustrates the first sentence and no coordinating conjunction is being used to connect the sentences. If only one sentence follows the colon, do not capitalize the first word of the new sentence. If two or more sentences follow the colon, capitalize the first word of each sentence following.
Capitalize only the first letter of each of their names.eg. David Hume, Thomas Hobbes
only if you put quotation markes on each side
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.
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.
The correct way to capitalize the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" is to capitalize the first letter of each word.
You always capitalize the first letter of each sentence. You also capitalize every I. Also and names, states, cities, and proper nouns will also be capitalized.
Yes, in this sentence "The Postman Always Rings Twice," you capitalize the first letter of each word except for the articles "the" and "always." This is a style commonly used for book titles and headlines.
Her characteristics were impressive in each and every way. This is a sentence using characteristics word.
Each of them produced the right amount of ideas for the new invention.
Is all the letters that you put in front of a sentence (i.e. You have no money.) and it can be the letter that you put in your name (i.e. John Martin) and when you have in a sentence like this (i.e. Oh my god I have a crush on him.) you can even put it in to a question and exclamation (i.e. Who are you?/ OMG it's.... Justin Bieber!)