Only if you are using it as part of someone's title or designation. For example:
'Jane is the secretary of the reading group and Anne is the president.'
'The role of president is purely an honorary one, unlike that of chairperson.'
'When I was in Barathia I met President Lopez.'
'David Bloggs is likely to be the next President of Europa.'
'Of course you must attend the celebration - you are the President!'
I would not capitalize it because it is a just a noun. Think, would you capitalize house. As in, they live in a green House. What about they live in a blue Teepee? My advice: don't capitalize.
When to capitalize the word "it" in a title is somewhat confusing. One rule states that capital letters are used for the first word and every important word in a title. Another rule adds that short conjunctions and prepositions are generally not capitalized. A third source says to capitalize every word in a title except conjunctions, articles and short prepositions. But I haven't yet seen a capitalization rule that specifically refers to pronouns. The consensus, from the half dozen or so sources I consulted, seems to be that one should capitalize the word "it" in a title. But I generally do not consider "it" to be an "important" word in a title. Nevertheless, my recommendation is go with the flow and give "it" a capital "I."
No, you do not capitalize the second word in the complimentary closing.
New York City should be capitalized with each word starting with a capital letter.
You would never capitalize a word because of the comma. Onlt capitalize it if it's a word that is always capitalized like France, I, Tuesday or Frederick.
No there's no need for capitalization.
Yes, you have to capitalize the word Dijon because if you don't use the Capital D, it will be underlined wrong.
Only capitalize the word "you" when you are using it at the beginning of a sentence or when it is part of a title.
Capitalize the first word of a sentence. Capitalize proper nouns, names of people, places, and brands. Capitalize the pronoun "I". Capitalize the first word in a quotation if it is a complete sentence. Do not capitalize common nouns, unless they are part of a title or come at the beginning of a sentence.
It should be capitalized when it forms part of a title or is at the beginning of a sentence.
You use capital letters only if it is a place. Also you use it to capitalize your first word of a sentence.
The word capitalize (capitalise) is not a noun it's a verb: capitalize, capitalizes, capitalizing, capitalized. To capitalize is to use upper case letters; to convert into capital or to compute the present value of financial resources. The noun form is capitalization.
I would not capitalize it because it is a just a noun. Think, would you capitalize house. As in, they live in a green House. What about they live in a blue Teepee? My advice: don't capitalize.
"Capital" is primarily a noun, but it is also used as a so-called "substantive adjective", as in "capital punishment."
No. "Paris is a capital of France. The city has a population of 2.2 million."
The word capitalize (capitalise) is not a noun it's a verb: capitalize, capitalizes, capitalizing, capitalized. To capitalize is to use upper case letters; to convert into capital or to compute the present value of financial resources. The noun form is capitalization.
No. You capitalize the word "God" because it is a proper noun -- that is, it is someone's name. Whatever comes after it may be another proper noun or not, but there is no rule that you must capital any word after the word "God."