Names of people are proper nouns, therefor they require a capital letter.
yes. because its proper noun and noun is when you capitalize person place or thing :) :) thanks!
Yes, "Professor" should be capitalized when it is used before a person's name as a title. For example: Professor Smith.
It should be capitalized when it is used in place of the person's name. In other words, it should be capitalized when it is not preceded by a possessive pronoun.
Yes, you should capitalize the name of a feasibility study as it is a proper noun.
Yes, you should capitalize "Hydrocodone" as it is a proper drug name.
The "Texas State Government" is a noun, and it is proper to capitalize it. Just as you would capitalize the name of a person.
Capitalize titles in writing and grammar when they come before a person's name, as in "President Lincoln." However, do not capitalize titles when they are used generically, like "the president announced a new policy."
Yes you should capitalize the name of cities. You would capitalize it because it is a proper noun.
NO!!! The English Grammar rule is the first letter of the first word in a sentence is a capital letter. Proper Nouns always have capital letters. .e. New York. The singular 'I' in a sentence is ALWAYS a capital letter. e.g. To New York, I shall go. Note the capital letters.
Only when his name follows
Yes, you should capitalize "Chess Club" as it is a specific name or title of a club.
It depends on what the word is. If this word is a person's name or a company name or a city name then it should begin with a capital letter.In the dictionary Ambien is the name of a pharmaceutical drug in this case it should have a capital letter