At the beginning of the sentence and when it forms part of the proper noun or when it is used as a direct address.
Examples:
Cousin Anna
I like to see you in your red dress, Cousin.
You can use the letter I in the middle of a sentence to describe yourself.
Yes, "Good afternoon" should have a capital letter at the beginning when it starts a sentence or is used as a greeting. However, if it appears in the middle of a sentence, only the "G" in "Good" would be capitalized. It is important to follow proper capitalization rules based on the context in which the phrase is used.
Whether or not you capitalize the first word inside a parenthetical statement depends on the placement and use of the statement itself.If the phrase inside parenthesis is not a complete sentence (and also, if it is inserted in the middle of an enclosing sentence), you would not capitalize the first word. The exception to that, of course, is if the word would normally be capitalized as a proper noun (Mike, for instance).If the phrase in parenthesis is a complete sentence, it would also, then, start with a capital letter. A statement like this generally would notbe inserted into the middle of a sentence as in the prior case. (This isn't hard to remember once you practice a bit!)
Simple. I live in Middle America.
The letter 'g' is in the middle of the word, night.
Yes
yes....
Yes, "Dutchman" should have a capital letter "D" in the middle of a sentence because it is a proper noun and should be capitalized regardless of its position in a sentence.
No if in the middle of a sentence but yes if at the start of a sentence.
You can use the letter I in the middle of a sentence to describe yourself.
If you have a letter after after quotation marks and things like that, it should be capitalized, even if it's in the middle of the sentence. It isolates what the person is about to say in a sentence. All sentences begin with a capitol letter. So, you should capitalize letters after quotes and such.
The letter "I" is capitalized in the middle of a sentence because it is a pronoun referring to oneself. In English grammar, the pronoun "I" is always capitalized regardless of its position in a sentence to indicate its importance and individuality.
Yes, "Good afternoon" should have a capital letter at the beginning when it starts a sentence or is used as a greeting. However, if it appears in the middle of a sentence, only the "G" in "Good" would be capitalized. It is important to follow proper capitalization rules based on the context in which the phrase is used.
No, a capital "I" is only used when referring to oneself as a pronoun. In the middle of a sentence, "I" should always be in lowercase unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or being used as a proper noun.
Yes, "radiologist" should be capitalized in the middle of a sentence only if it is part of a proper noun or if it starts with a capital letter due to a specific style guide or naming convention. In general, it is not capitalized in the middle of a sentence.
"Please" should not start with a capital letter unless it's at the beginning of a sentence. Only proper nouns (like 'The Eiffel Tower" or "Bob") start with a capital letter when used in the middle of a sentence.
Yes just like Ms and other things of that sort.