Yes it is.
The word Dutch is a proper noun. The noun Dutch is the name of the language or the people of the Netherlands. The word Dutch is always capitalized. The only time that capitalization is not required is when used for idioms such as 'dutch date' or 'go dutch' meaning to share expenses.
Yes. Just like German, French, English, Spanish, Norwegian, Dutch, Australian, European, Asian, and any other adjectives derived from the name of a country or continent, the words "American" and "African" should be capitalized. They should be capitalized whether you use them together or separately.
No, seasons are not capitalized.
Wikipedia is capitalized.
Have should be capitalized if it is the beginning of a sentence. Summer should not be capitalized.
In Dutch, proper nouns are capitalized, while regular nouns are not capitalized unless they start a sentence or form part of a title.
Yes.It should be- People from theNetherla nds speak Dutch.
Dutch does not capitalize all nouns like German does. In Dutch, only proper nouns are capitalized, while common nouns are not capitalized unless they appear at the beginning of a sentence.
No, "double dutch" should not be capitalized in this sentence as it is being used generically to describe a type of jump rope activity.
The sentence "Mr. David A. Walker developed Double Dutch into a world-class sport" is correctly capitalized with the proper noun "David" having its first and last name capitalized, along with the term "Double Dutch." The title "Mr." and the phrase "world-class" are also appropriately capitalized.
The word Dutch is a proper noun. The noun Dutch is the name of the language or the people of the Netherlands. The word Dutch is always capitalized. The only time that capitalization is not required is when used for idioms such as 'dutch date' or 'go dutch' meaning to share expenses.
Yes, "van" in "Ludwig van Beethoven" should be capitalized when it is part of a person's name. In Dutch naming conventions, "van" is a preposition that means "from" and is traditionally capitalized when it appears in a surname. Therefore, the correct form is "Ludwig van Beethoven."
Yes, in this case "Finals" should be capitalized as it is part of a proper noun: National Double Dutch Finals.
The Dutch surname (with prefix) is usually spelled van Gogh (e.g. artist Vincent van Gogh).(the prefix van is not capitalized in proper usage)
Van means "from" in Dutch, and as a particle, should notbe capitalized with Vincent (or any other name) in front of it, and should be capitalized without.Thus: Vincent van Gogh painted wonderful art.Later, Van Gogh cut off his ear.As an added note: his birth name is Vincent Willem van Gogh- Gogh is technically where he is from.
Yes. Just like German, French, English, Spanish, Norwegian, Dutch, Australian, European, Asian, and any other adjectives derived from the name of a country or continent, the words "American" and "African" should be capitalized. They should be capitalized whether you use them together or separately.
No, seasons are not capitalized.