Yes, you should capitalize the first letter after a comma in a sentence.
Yes, you should capitalize the letter after a comma in a sentence.
Yes, you should capitalize the word after a comma in a sentence.
No, a capital letter is not typically placed after a comma in standard English grammar rules. A comma is used to separate independent clauses within a sentence or to separate items in a list. After a comma, the next word should generally be in lowercase unless it is a proper noun or the start of a new sentence.
You would never capitalize a word because of the comma. Onlt capitalize it if it's a word that is always capitalized like France, I, Tuesday or Frederick.
No, only after a full stop (period). Also do not capitalise "The" and "A" in your sentence.
In most cases, the word "sit" does not need to be capitalized after a comma unless it is the start of a new sentence. The general rule is to capitalize the first word of a new sentence, regardless of whether it follows a comma.
The correct sentence is "Look! cried Louis, it's a rainbow." Place the comma after "Look" and capitalize the beginning of the dialogue sentence.
yes
Capitalize after a comma when it occurs within a sentence if it is the beginning of a new sentence or a proper noun. For example: "John went shopping. He bought a new shirt." or "I visited Paris, France, last summer."
Only if it is the first word in a sentence.
The first letter of a sentence is capitalized, and that includes the first letter of a sentence quoted within a passage. For example: He looked up and said, "Come in;" adding with a smile, "we've been expecting you." The quotation is, "Come in; we've been expecting you." "Come" begins the utterance and is capitalized; there is no reason to capitalize "we've."
No, not unless it was beginning the sentence. Capitalize, by the way.