No.
We should stay the course to capitalize on the trade winds.
No, you do not capitalize "first birthday" in a sentence.
You only capitalize 'deceased' if it is at the start of a sentence.
Capitalize government in the middle of the sentence if you're referring to a specific government (Federal Government, State Government, etc) or if you're referring to a course about government (I'm going to be late for Government!).Capitalize civil rights in the middle of a sentence only if you're referring to the Civil Rights Movement.
You should not capitalize a sentence fragment following a colon.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is n ot a proper n ou n.
We should stay the course to capitalize on the trade winds.
We should stay the course to capitalize on the trade winds.
No you don't. Unless, of course, it's the first word of a sentence.
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.
Yes, you should capitalize the letter after a comma in a sentence.
Yes, you should capitalize the word after a comma in a sentence.
Yes, you always capitalize a day of the week.
Capitalize government in the middle of the sentence if you're referring to a specific government (Federal Government, State Government, etc) or if you're referring to a course about government (I'm going to be late for Government!).Capitalize civil rights in the middle of a sentence only if you're referring to the Civil Rights Movement.
You should not capitalize a sentence fragment following a colon.