No, except if driver's license begins the sentence. Then you would capitalize driver's. Driver's license and car registration are two things you always need to have with you when driving. I always take my driver's license with me when driving.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.
Yes you do; you always capitalize the name of a state.
The inappropriate word in the sentence is "drivers." It should be "driver's" to indicate possession, as it refers to the license belonging to the driver. The corrected sentence would read: "Dad lost his driver's license."
My drivers' license is valid.
Hailey had a convivial recrudescence when she got her drivers license .
There are prerequisites you must acquire before you can get your drivers license.
You do not capitalize chickenpox in a sentence. The exception is if the word is the first in the sentence.
No, you do not capitalize "first birthday" in a sentence.
You only capitalize 'deceased' if it is at the start of a sentence.
can I exchange my Florida drivers license for a wisconsin drivers license
I FINALLY got my drivers license today!
Yes, you should capitalize the letter after a comma in a sentence.