It depends on how it is being used, but in most times no, it will not be capitalized.
If you're using the word to distinguish between a father and son of the same name, then you capitalise it, For example:
John Smith Senior
John Smith Junior
Senior or, if someone is the "Peter Junior", then the father is Peter (not necessary to write senior).
Rest in Peace.
Oh, dude, you're hitting me with some grammar stuff! So, the superlative of "senior" is "most senior," and the positive degree is just "senior." For "junior," it's "most junior" in the superlative and "junior" in the positive degree. As for "superior," it's "most superior" in the superlative and "superior" in the positive degree. And finally, for "inferior," it's "most inferior" in the superlative and "inferior" in the positive degree. Like, hope that clears things up for ya!
It depends on the context of the sentence. If being used as in "He is a senior in college" then you do not capitalize. If used in conjunction with a proper noun, then it is capitalized.
If it is just as a reference to differentiate them from someone older of the same name, then no you wouldn't. If it was part of their actual name, then it would be capitalised. Your question seems to indicate that you are talking about the first case, so in that case, it would not be capitalised.
Capitalize college years when they are used as proper nouns or when they are part of a title, such as Freshman Orientation or Senior Thesis. Otherwise, use lowercase, for example, "I am a senior studying biology."
Yes You may be talking about a guy whose legal name is Junior. This is not usually the case. When a boy is named after his father, he will often sign his name with 'jr' at the end, and he is often called Junior as a nickname. Junior would be an unusual legal name, especially if it is his father's name as well. His father would be Junior Senior, and he would be Junior Junior. Imagine if their family name is Senior. they would be Junior Senior Senior, and Junior Senior Junior. If the son is in the military, he might be Major Junior Senior, Junior, Camp Jejune.
Yes, when Senior dies, Junior can take the suffix of Senior if there is another of the same name (a son of Junior, for example) to take the Junior suffix. Otherwise Junior can simply drop the suffix altogether, or continue to use Junior if his professional identity, for example, is strongly tied to that naming convention.
You don't capitalize it except if it is the beginning of a sentence
Junior Senior ended in 2008.
Junior Senior was created in 1998.
Junior Senior - film - was created in 2003.
Senior- for the father Junior- for the son III- for the grandson
Senior or, if someone is the "Peter Junior", then the father is Peter (not necessary to write senior).
Commonly, if you have a parent whose name is the same as yours, the father's name may be senior, yours may be junior, and your child would be The II. If your mother has the same name, her name would be based off the grandparent's name (Jr if the grandparent's name is a senior), and so on. The II is normally used after the family has been named Senior and Junior of a same family member's name. I could be wrong though, because a junior can be named The II too.
Junior yr - 3th yr Senior yr- 4th(final) yr & Junior/Senior CGPA means the avg of third and fourth yr
A title should be capitalized only if it is used like a name: I spoke to Junior Counselor Higgins. Junior Counselor Higgins was invited to the meeting. If a title is not used as a name, it is not capitalized: I spoke to the junior counselor. We hired ten junior counselors.