Capitalize b in best whe
n it is used at the begi
n
ni
ng of the se
nte
nce, otherwise b a
nd r should
not be capitalized.
If Insurance Broker is a name, as in, the company that I work for is the Midwest Insurance Broker, then yes, you should capitalize it; if it is merely a description, as in, I am going to talk to my insurance broker, then no, do not capitalize it.
No. Greetings are not capitalized. They're pretty much like a sentence or part of the document itself, not like a title. It's just written as "To whom it may concern:" ============================================================= I performed an advanced search on Google, and typed in "to whom it may concern" along with the words "capital," "capitalize" and "capitalization." It returned 74,600 hits. A quick review of the first 200 hits indicated that one should either: (1) Capitalize all words; (2) Capitalize only the first word; (3) Capitalize every letter in every word; (4) Do not capitalize any of the words; (5) Capitalize the word "To" and follow it with a colon, and then either (a) capitalize or (b) do not capitalize the other words; (6) Capitalize "To" and "Whom" only; (7) Capitalize "To" and "May" only; Capitalize "To" "Whom" and "Concern" only; or (8) Capitalize every word except "it." Of course, I might have missed a variation or two. I recall being taught in elementary school, over half a century ago, to treat the salutation like a title. That being the case, the rule for capitalizing titles is: Capitalize the first word and every word except conjunctions, articles and short prepositions. But I seem to remember being taught not to capitalize pronouns in a title either. The bottom line seems to be that no matter which form you choose, someone will think it is incorrect. My suggestion is to capitalize "To" only, but from the variety of choices I've seen, you can do pretty much as you please.
A-B-C
B. best L. loser V. ville B. bum
Both are used in comparison and contrast essays. Block involves describing one thing being compared/or contrasted, then describing the other thing being compared/contrasted. Point by point involves talking about the two items in regards for specific characteristics one point at a time. For example, you might discuss the size of object a and object b. Then you might move on to the color of object a and object b.
The 'B' should be capitalised.
no
Barcelona (remember to capitalize the "b")
I think you want the word "Belgium". Be sure to capitalize the "b".
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
Yes, at least 25 of them, with regards to liver enzymes.
Yes, at least 25 of them, with regards to liver enzymes.
B arking Cat Commercial!!!!!!!!!!
It would be spelled exactly like how you've spelled it (but capitalize the B, of course)
If a and b are both rational then a = 0 = b. If they are not both rational then there are an infinite number of solutions.
If Insurance Broker is a name, as in, the company that I work for is the Midwest Insurance Broker, then yes, you should capitalize it; if it is merely a description, as in, I am going to talk to my insurance broker, then no, do not capitalize it.
base, ball, best, bike, both, bust, byte