Only if you are referring to God.
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.
No it shouldn't be capitalized.
if you are starting a new sentence, yes you should. if you are using the word in the middle or at the end of the sentence, you shouldn't capitalize it.
No. if you give the dog a name then capitalize that but not the word dog.
The word "have" is capitalized if it's the first word in a sentence, e.g., "Have you ever been to London?"If, however, the word "have" appears in the middle of a sentence, there is no need to capitalize it, e.g., "I have never been to London."
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).
No, you would not capitalize either word in this sentence
when you put the word 'cholera' in the beginning of the sentence, like: Cholera is a disease.
Whether or not you capitalize the first word inside a parenthetical statement depends on the placement and use of the statement itself.If the phrase inside parenthesis is not a complete sentence (and also, if it is inserted in the middle of an enclosing sentence), you would not capitalize the first word. The exception to that, of course, is if the word would normally be capitalized as a proper noun (Mike, for instance).If the phrase in parenthesis is a complete sentence, it would also, then, start with a capital letter. A statement like this generally would notbe inserted into the middle of a sentence as in the prior case. (This isn't hard to remember once you practice a bit!)
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.