Yes it should be capitalized.
Yes, at least the French part. On a restaurant menu it should be fully capitalized.
Restaurant is not capitalized, unless it begins the sentence.
On its own there is no need for it to be capitalized. However, restaurants might have 'restaurant' in their title. It should be capitalized in that circumstance.
It is a fragment that shouldn't be capitalized or punctuated.
If the phrase junior (Jr) is at the end of a person's name, it is capitalized. As in Daniel Boorstin, Jr.
No, "restaurant" is not capitalized in the phrase "Chinese restaurant." The only word that should be capitalized is "Chinese" in this context.
Yes, at least the French part. On a restaurant menu it should be fully capitalized.
Restaurant is not capitalized, unless it begins the sentence.
On its own there is no need for it to be capitalized. However, restaurants might have 'restaurant' in their title. It should be capitalized in that circumstance.
It should be: Palm Beach Restaurant
Truck Stop is capitalized when used as a name of a restaurant.
No, nationalities, religions, days of the week, or months are not capitalized in French.
In English, the word French is capitalized when it means the language, a French person or things from France. However, the lowercase is often used for terms that are no longer specifically French. The term "french fries" is usually not capitalized, but opinions vary on french dressing and french curve.In French, the word français (French) is not capitalized as an adjective. It is, however, capitalized Français when it means a French person.
The phrase 'cafe des amis' mean 'friends' coffee'. It is derived from French. It is often used as a name for a French-themed restaurant, hotel, bistro or caf©.
I think you should capitalize 'Sushi' but not restaurant. it should be Sushi restaurant.
You should write French with a capital letter, so French restaurant is correct.
restaurant is French, but you pronounce it like restauran. (without the t)restaurant like you