When used as part of a title, yes, e.g. President Obama. When used as a common noun, no, e.g. "The president [of the company] had a meeting with the board yesterday".
Yes, the word "Apple" should be capitalized when referring to the company or brand.
President should be capitalized if it is referring to the president of a country. However, if it is referring to a school president, or the president of a club for example, then it shouldn't be capitalized.
Does the days of the week get capitalized in a sentence. ie Monday, Tuesday?
The word 'Twitter' is a proper noun when referring to the social networking company Twitter. A proper noun is always capitalized. The word 'twitter' (lower case t) is also a common noun and a verb. A common noun is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.
When used as part of a title, yes, e.g. President Obama. When used as a common noun, no, e.g. "The president [of the company] had a meeting with the board yesterday".
It depends. The general word, president, is not capitalized, because it does not refer to any specific position or person. As part of a title, such as President Obama, the word is always capitalized. In the US, "President" is usually capitalized when it refers to the President of the United States.
Yes, the word "Apple" should be capitalized when referring to the company or brand.
It should only be capitalized if it is followed by the president's name. For example:The meeting was attended by President John Smith.It shouldn't be capitalized in all other cases.
President should be capitalized if it is referring to the president of a country. However, if it is referring to a school president, or the president of a club for example, then it shouldn't be capitalized.
Does the days of the week get capitalized in a sentence. ie Monday, Tuesday?
The world " Amazon " in the company's logo is not capitalized ,nonetheless when the company Name is used in text its seems to be most often Capitalized as would be the name of any other company.
The word 'Twitter' is a proper noun when referring to the social networking company Twitter. A proper noun is always capitalized. The word 'twitter' (lower case t) is also a common noun and a verb. A common noun is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.
Yes, but only if it is the the terms of the President of the United States. Not if it is the president of a smaller company or association. If you use it as President Obama, or President Bush, it also has to be capitalized. It is a rank of high honor, so it is considered necessary to capitalize it. ok then you win
The word "director" should be capitalized when it is used as a title before someone's name (e.g., Director Smith). Otherwise, when used in a general sense to refer to a position or role, it does not need to be capitalized (e.g., the director of the company).
Capitalization in TitlesMost title keywords should be capitalized. Only minor words (at, the, if, in, for etc.) should be left without capitals, unless they are at the beginning of the title (eg. The Shadow in the Light). Minor words, in general, are approximately 1-3 letters long, but that does not mean that every 1-3 letter word should not have capitals (eg. What Happened to the Cat), in which the 3-letter word "Cat" is still capitalized.
Yes, presidency is a common noun; a word for the office of a president, any president of anything. A common noun is only capitalized when it is the first word in a sentence.