It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun, when it precedes a person's name or when it is used as a direct address.
Examples:
Council Member Estrella
Go to the meeting, Council Member.
At the beginning of the sentence and when it forms part of the proper noun.
Examples:
Mayor John Rino
Reminding you of your meeting with Allen, Mayor.
only if it has a name after it
just write Native Americans.
Because you think you would be the best person for the job and your significant other supports your decision.
No, but you should capitalize American. If the specific branch of the military is named, it should be capitalized.
If you're speaking of a specific college. If you were to say "Your mom goes to college" then it would be lower case. Whereas if you're saying "Your mom goes to Trillium College" then you would capitalize it.
no only the council because they were appointed by the king.
At the beginning of a sentence.
No, you would not capitalize either word in this sentence
no
It would be appropriate to write, Dear Council Member J. Smith:
Yes, the names of political parties are typically capitalized in a sentence to distinguish them as proper nouns. For example, "I am a member of the Democratic Party."
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.
The council member would be an At-Large candidate.
Yes, because in this case it is part of a proper noun phrase.Bedford City Council met on Monday night.He ran for city council.
No. You capitalize titles and proper nouns, but you treat a quote as you would any written sentence.
People do not capitalize "a" in a sentence because it is not a proper noun. There is no other reason why "a" would be capitalized. If you are talking about getting an A on an assignment, however, it would be capitalized.
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).