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You do not capitalize "president'. You only capitalize "president" if you are using it with a president's name. EX: The president is tall. EX: The tallest president was President Abraham Lincoln.
You would capitalize Indian but not reservation because Indian is a proper noun but reservation is not.
The Northeast and the Midwest
The Northeast and the Midwest.
Midwest
You would definitely capitalize it. Every style guide available on the Web indicates that you should. And there's a semantic reason for it -- it helps delineate the word and accentuates its importance as a particular geographic region of the U.S.
At the beginning of a sentence.
No, you would not capitalize either word in this sentence
No, unless it is part of a proper noun or the first word in a sentence. The word "beef" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence.
no
No, "sign language" is not typically capitalized in a sentence unless it is part of a title or at the beginning of a sentence.
No, "pigeon" is not typically capitalized in a sentence unless it is part of a proper noun or at the beginning of a sentence.
Only capitalize "Democrat" when it refers to a specific political party or organization. In a general sentence referring to someone who supports democratic ideals, "democrat" should not be capitalized.
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.
No. You capitalize titles and proper nouns, but you treat a quote as you would any written sentence.
I cannot think of any sentence that you would capitalize the word cub.The cub slept with its mother. The bear had three cubs.
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).