Only if it is the first word in a sentence or a proper name, e.g. a company named Nationwide.
Yes.
Use motherland in a sentence
It depends on how you use it. If it is a name it should be capitalized. If it is another part of the speech it shouldn't be capitalized
it just depend on how you use it in the sentence
When you use it at the starting of the sentence otherwise you capitalize it all the time.
If it is the first word in a sentence, or if it is used as a proper noun in the title of a specific entity called a foundation, it should always be capitalized. For example it is capitalized if you use the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation in a sentence. Otherwise, used as the supportive structure of a building or as a layer of make-up it is not capitalized.
This nation shall not perish.
Example sentence - The soldiers mothers longed for the country to become a united nation once again.
The Pan-American Games are held quadrennially.Pan-American is capitalized, hyphenated, and used as an adjective in a sentence.
Great Britain was a seafaring nation.
A sentence with the words dynasty and nation-state describing the Egyptian civilization is... King Narmer began the first dynasty in his nation-state and the world.
Example sentence: She had embroidered Lilliputian flowers and butterflies along the outside edge.Note: Lilliputian is derived from a proper noun, the fictional place Lilliput, and is therefore capitalized. However, when it is used to mean "very small" (as in the sentence above), it is often not capitalized.