Greek is always capitalized because it is a propernou
n but philosopher is a commo
n
nou
n so it is
not capitalized.
It should be -- Greek philosopher.
Greek is always capitalized, but the life in general isn't. It only needs one pronoun to be "proper."
Yes
Greek should always be capitalized.
No, you should not. You should only capitalize a word when it is at the start of a sentence or when it is a proper noun.
Unless it is the first word in a sentence, then you don't need to capitalize "tobacco."
It should only be capitalized if it is the first word in a sentence.
only when name follows
Greek should always be capitalized.
No, you should not. You should only capitalize a word when it is at the start of a sentence or when it is a proper noun.
Yes, you should capitalize the word "scurvy" if it is the first word in a sentence or if it is part of a proper noun or title.
No.
At the beginning of a sentence.
If its the first word
if you are starting a new sentence, yes you should. if you are using the word in the middle or at the end of the sentence, you shouldn't capitalize it.
Unless it is the first word in a sentence, then you don't need to capitalize "tobacco."
Only if it is the first word in a sentence.
It should only be capitalized if it is the first word in a sentence.
You only capitalize with if it begins a sentence. Example:With recent rains, crops should grow well.
only when name follows