Yes, when it is a noun: The Supreme Court seems to have disregarded the First Amendment No, when it is an adjective: However, the circumstances ostensibly did not preclude first amendment protection *Note: this is for writing law review articles from the Bluebook, if your not sure what to do it probably better to capitilize
Unless it is the first word in a sentence, then you don't need to capitalize "tobacco."
Yes, you should capitalize the first letter after a comma in a sentence.
No. It's not necessary.
It should only be capitalized if it is the first word in a sentence.
Only if it is the first word in a sentence.
Yes. "Our" is a pronoun, and all pronouns in titles are capitalized.
In a title, you should capitalize all words except for short conjunctions like "for," "and," "but," and "or" unless they are the first or last word in the title.
There are many different styles, and different newspapers may use different ones.You can capitalize only the first word and proper nounsYou can capitalize all wordsYou can use capitalize the first word and other "important" words.I recommend the first.
If you are referring to the specific proposed amendment from the 1970's, then yes, you capitalize it. If you are referring to the general concept of similar proposals, then you do not capitalize it.For example:The Equal Rights Amendment was not adopted as part of the United States Constitution because not enough states ratified it before the deadline.California and several other states have an equal rights amendment in their state constitutions.
In "Sincerely yours," you should capitalize only the first letter of each word (Sincerely Yours).
You should capitalize the first letter of the sentence "Who is your favorite French artist?"
Yes, you should capitalize "About" in a title.