Yes. It should be Professor Smith.
You capitalize a title of a position when it directly precedes a person's name, but not when it stands alone or follows the name. For example, in "Professor Smith," "Professor" is capitalized because it comes before the name. But in "The professor spoke," it is lowercase because it is not directly before the name.
Yes, you should capitalize the name of a feasibility study as it is a proper noun.
Yes, President is a title just like professor. Its acceptable to not capitalize these words when they are not describing someone. EX: the history professor is really difficult. But when it is not a noun, and is however, a pronoun you should capitalize it. With the exception of President and Doctor. These should for the most part always capitalized.
Yes, you should capitalize "Hydrocodone" as it is a proper drug name.
Yes, you should capitalize "Chess Club" as it is a specific name or title of a club.
You capitalize a title of a position when it directly precedes a person's name, but not when it stands alone or follows the name. For example, in "Professor Smith," "Professor" is capitalized because it comes before the name. But in "The professor spoke," it is lowercase because it is not directly before the name.
yes
Simple answer? Yes.
Only if you're addressing him. Like, "Professor Smith, I have a problem." Or... "My instructor, Professor Smith, helped me with a problem." Not if it was like, "My professor helped my with a problem."
Yes. 'Sun' is its name and you capitalize it just as you capitalize anyone's name.
If its a name.
You capitalize Apollo because it is a name.
No, but you capitalize the name of a biome.
Yes, you should capitalize the name of a feasibility study as it is a proper noun.
Yes, President is a title just like professor. Its acceptable to not capitalize these words when they are not describing someone. EX: the history professor is really difficult. But when it is not a noun, and is however, a pronoun you should capitalize it. With the exception of President and Doctor. These should for the most part always capitalized.
Yes, you capitalize "the" when it is part of a proper noun or title.
Always capitalize a proper name. Examples: James Brian United States of America California