No.
Example: I ate forty-seven burgers.
Yes, you should capitalize the first letter of a quote at the beginning of a sentence, even if it is in the middle of another sentence. This helps to indicate that the quoted material is beginning.
No, unless it is part of a proper noun or the first word in a sentence. The word "beef" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence.
No, the word "winter" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a proper noun.
Yes, you should capitalize the letter "I" in the word "I'm" when it is used in the middle of a sentence. This is a grammatical rule in English that applies to the personal pronoun "I" when it is used on its own or as part of a contraction.
Only if it has a proper nou n i n them like Germa n measles, Dow n's sy ndrome,...
no
You mean if you are writing out the number like "thirty-five"? No. You don't capitalize it in the middle of the sentence.
No.
No you don't.
No.
no
No.
In the middle of a sentence, you don't capitalize second floor.
Yea
No you don't.
No it shouldn't be capitalized.
Yes, you should capitalize the first letter of a quote at the beginning of a sentence, even if it is in the middle of another sentence. This helps to indicate that the quoted material is beginning.