When it is used as part of the proper
nou
n.
Example:
The criminal was maki
ng a sce
ne at the Makati Police Statio
n yesterday.
She stopped her speech in mid-sentence to answer the question.
You should use a capital letter mid-sentence when writing proper nouns, such as names of people, places, or things, that require capitalization. This helps to give specific emphasis to those words within the sentence.
It depends on the context. If you are quoting mid-sentence and the quote wasn't the end of your sentence then the next word shouldn't be capitalized.
"I usually eat my lunch around mid-afternoon."
---> No.. world is never capitalized unless at the beginning of a sentence or in the title of something.
no
She stopped her speech in mid-sentence to answer the question.
No it is not.
Aposiopesis.
You should use a capital letter mid-sentence when writing proper nouns, such as names of people, places, or things, that require capitalization. This helps to give specific emphasis to those words within the sentence.
Yes it can be used in as sentence it was used in the mid 20th century but is not as common now.
It depends on the context. If you are quoting mid-sentence and the quote wasn't the end of your sentence then the next word shouldn't be capitalized.
The football player intercepted the ball.Roy caught the football in mid flight during the game and it became the first one he intercepted. The police intercepted a call made by robbers by wire-tapping the phone.
If you we're writing on Micosoft Word and were correcting a word mid-way through a sentence you can hit the 'end' key and it will take you to the end of the sentence.
We hold our mid-week conference on Wednesday afternoons at two. When I walked into the room, Mary stopped what she was saying in mid-sentence.
"I usually eat my lunch around mid-afternoon."
Generally, hyphenate the "mid" (within, in the middle of) prefix if it modifies an original word as opposed to a distinct term, and for items that do not have separate "ends" or "middles". e.g. midday, midair, midway, but mid-sentence, mid-ocean, mid-Atlantic, mid-stride. Also, if the resultant word appears indistinct, such as "midriver" (readers see the word 'driver'), hyphenation may clarify the intent.