Tailor is not a proper noun unless it is the last name of a person and it would only be capitalized at the start of a sentence so otherwise it is not capitalized.
When it appears in a movie title
No it doesn't require to be capitalized.
There is no grammatical reason to capitalize every word in a sentence. It may sometimes be done as someone's attempt at emphasis, but it is never grammatically correct.
You would capitalize it if it's part of a name. "We stopped at the inn" would not be capitalized, but "We stopped at Comfort Inn" would.
If you are talking about zoos in general, then no, it should not be capitalized. However, if you are talking about a particular zoo then it should be capitalized. An example would be: We went to the San Francisco Zoo today. This sentence is written with correct punctuation.
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.
The correct way to capitalize the title "How I Spent My Summer Vacation" is to capitalize the first letter of each word.
yes you are very correct
No it doesn't require to be capitalized.
You would capitalize that word however you use it.
No, there is no need to capitalize "linguists" as it is not a proper noun. You would only capitalize it if it was forming part of a title.
You would capitalize the next word after a comma if it is the start of a new sentence or if it is a proper noun.
There is no grammatical reason to capitalize every word in a sentence. It may sometimes be done as someone's attempt at emphasis, but it is never grammatically correct.
You would capitalize Baltimore by making the first letter of the word uppercase - "Baltimore."
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).
You would capitalize it if it's part of a name. "We stopped at the inn" would not be capitalized, but "We stopped at Comfort Inn" would.
You do not have to capitalize fourteen hundred dollars. The only time you would capitalize any word in that phrase is when the word "fourteen" was used at the beginning of a sentence.
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.