Yes.
I would capitalize all of them. Catch Me If You Can.
You can capitalize both.But you may only capitalize either of them if talking about a specific president or a specific vice chancellor.For example, if you are talking about "The President of the United States" that would be capitalized as it is specific and not general. Or if you were talking about, say, "President Obama" it would capitalized as you are speaking specifically about an actual president. Now, if you were to say, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the president!" It would not be capitalized because you are not specifically speaking of one certain president.Same thing for vice chancellor. If it is speaking of a specific person, it would become capitalized. If not, and you're simply saying something like said before. For example, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the vice chancellor of...!" And so forth. Other than that, vice chancellor would remain lower cased and not capitalized.
No. You should only capitalize proper nouns so presidential is not capitalized. But if you are talking about the President as in "The President refused to comment" then it should be capitalized. However, if you are talking about presidents generically as in "no one is really sure who was the first president to...." then do not capitalize.
In normal use, you would not capitalize it. It there are specific instances when it is used as a title that it would be correct to capitalize it. The Catholic Missionary Church was located in Nairobi.
no
A Chamber of Commerce is basically a network of businesses with a goal of furthering interests of businesses. For example, a local Chamber of Commerce would consist of a bunch of local businesses in the area.
There is not enough information available to determine who Mr. D.P. Khaitan is. Additional details would be needed to provide an accurate answer.
You do not capitalize "president'. You only capitalize "president" if you are using it with a president's name. EX: The president is tall. EX: The tallest president was President Abraham Lincoln.
Possibly. I would advise NOT to do it though... Check with your local Chamber of Commerce.
to answer the question you would need to be more specific as to where you are looking to have the home built. The internet, local papers or, chamber of commerce would be the best bets.
First of all, I would start with the Chamber of Commerce in that town, or local City Hall to find the answer to your question.
hoover
I would capitalize all of them. Catch Me If You Can.
Colma is a town in California. There is an article about it on Wikipedia. Yelp has listings of various businesses in the town and another source of info would be the Chamber of Commerce.
You can call your local chamber of commerce, local telephone book, or a local newspaper may have that information.
You can capitalize both.But you may only capitalize either of them if talking about a specific president or a specific vice chancellor.For example, if you are talking about "The President of the United States" that would be capitalized as it is specific and not general. Or if you were talking about, say, "President Obama" it would capitalized as you are speaking specifically about an actual president. Now, if you were to say, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the president!" It would not be capitalized because you are not specifically speaking of one certain president.Same thing for vice chancellor. If it is speaking of a specific person, it would become capitalized. If not, and you're simply saying something like said before. For example, "When I grow up, I'm going to be the vice chancellor of...!" And so forth. Other than that, vice chancellor would remain lower cased and not capitalized.
You would capitalize that word however you use it.