Yes because it is the name of the country: "The United States of America"
"United States" is a proper noun. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing; United States is the name of a place. A proper noun is always capitalized.
Just British, not colony. An example:The United States was originally a collection of British colonies.
When referring to The Constitution of the United States, yes.
When you are referring to a specific president. If you are talking about the President of the United States, it's capitalized. If you are referring to President Kennedy, it's capitalized. It is not capitalized if you are saying, "someday I want to be president", because you are not referring to the person who is a president.Foreign leaders are not capitalized except as titles or direct address ("In Russia, the president wields substantial power.")
The word gauchos is Spanish for cowboys. If you are using it in that sense - "Los gauchos cabalgaban los caballos", or "The cowboys rode the horses" - then no, it does not need to be capitalized.However, Gauchos can also be used to describe a specific group of people from the South American region. In this case, it should be capitalized, just as Southerners is capitalized when speaking of people living in the Southern United States.
Flag is capitalized because it is our United States Flag. If you said the flag, it would be lower case.
Yes, as much as President of the United States is.
No, but "the" typically is, so the US is written The United States of America.
Yes, United States would be capitalized always. Even if it is in the middle of a sentence, you still need to capitalize it, because it is a proper noun. There is only one "United States". The common noun of the USA is "countries". There are many, many countries in the world (Brazil, Afghanistan, Britain, USA, etc.) but only one United States of America, which is a specific noun that identifies only one place.
Use Confederate States when referring to the Confederate States of America from the US Civil War. It is a noun and a proper name so it should be capitalized as United States is capitalized. In the example: Three Confederate states did not secede from the Union until May of 1861, Confederate again would be capitalized but states would not be. This is because states in this case does not refer to the whole Confederacy. It is like: There are 50 states in the United States.
"United States" is a proper noun. A proper noun is the name of a person, place, or thing; United States is the name of a place. A proper noun is always capitalized.
Just British, not colony. An example:The United States was originally a collection of British colonies.
When referring to The Constitution of the United States, yes.
Yes, the word "Constitution" should be capitalized when referring to a specific constitution, such as the United States Constitution.
Well, it's a title, and a nationally recognized one at that (not that I think being 'nationally recognized' has much to do with why it should be capitalized, but I digress). To answer your question; yes, I do believe it should be capitalized.
1: a league or compact for mutual support or common action : alliance2: a combination of persons for unlawful purposes : conspiracy3: the body formed by persons, states, or nations united by a league ; specifically capitalized : the 11 southern states seceding from the United States in 1860 and 1861 1: a league or compact for mutual support or common action :alliance2: a combination of persons for unlawful purposes : conspiracy3: the body formed by persons, states, or nations united by a league ; specifically capitalized: the 11 southern states seceding from the United States in 1860 and 1861
Yes, "West Coast" should be capitalized because it is a proper noun referring to a specific geographic region along the western coast of the United States.