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good question! not usually, unless they are part of title (e.g. Winter Olympics) or used poetically as entities (Spring's sweet breath)...however, they may be. there is nothing wrong with capitalizing them, in fact, it used to be common to capitalize all nouns in English, particularly ones such as seasons, Sun, Moon, Saturn, Rain, Snow, etc. In old stories, Children's Books, poetry, and elsewhere you will find nouns capitalized in non-modern ways, and it is not wrong.

that said, typically they aren't these days except in proper nouns as above.

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12y ago
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14y ago

The winters in Vermont are very cold. Mother always enjoyed bird-watching in the spring. They plan to take a cruise to Alaska in the fall.

The Fall 2009 semester begins in September. There are very few students on campus during the Summer term.

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12y ago

The only time a season would be capitalized would be to distinguish between a direction and a season, such as, "He will be travelling south," or, he is going to be living in the South.

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14y ago

No, unless it is part of a title. Examples: I am enrolling this fall. BUT: I enrolled in the Fall 2001 semester.

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14y ago

No, the seasons, summer, autumn, winter and spring, are not capitalized.

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12y ago

No, seasons are common nouns. If the names of the seasons are used as a proper name, then yes, capitalize them.

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13y ago

NO! who wouldn't know that

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13y ago

Do u need to capitalize the seasons

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11y ago

Nope (:

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Q: Do you capitalize seasons
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Related questions

Do you capitalize fall when you say will attend in the fall?

No you don't capitalize seasons unless they are in the beginning of the sentence.


Do you capitalize Fall 2010?

No, seasons are never capitalized.


Should you capitalize the season fall?

No, "fall" should not be capitalized unless it is used at the beginning of a sentence. It is a common noun, not a proper noun.


When to capitalize the season?

Seasons are only capitalized when they form part of a title.


Should you capitalize winter in the middle of a sentence?

No, the word "winter" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a proper noun.


Which capitalization rule is incorrect A Capitalize the first word of every sentence B Capitalize the seasons of the year C Capitalize the months and days of the year?

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."


Do you capitalize the different Seasons?

No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is not a proper noun.


Do you capitalize the seasons of the years?

Only is they are in the begginning of a sentence of someones name such as the name AUTUMN.


Is spring capitalized when referring to a school spring semester?

Yes, you always capitalize the names of seasons!


Should i captilize summer?

Yes you should capitalize Summer and all other seasons, it's Grammer101


Do you capitalize Fall of 2008 when referring to a season in a specific year?

Yes, you should capitalize "Fall of 2008" when referring to the season in a specific year because "Fall" is a proper noun denoting the season and "2008" is a specific year.


When do you capitalize the seasons of the year?

Seasons of the year are capitalized when they are used as proper nouns or part of a specific event or title, such as "Spring Festival" or "Winter Olympics." They are not capitalized when used descriptively or generally, such as "the winter months" or "enjoying the summer weather."