if it's english the language, no. I speak english. if it's english the class, yes. I take English class. and if it's English the people, yes. I'm an English girl. i'm not really english .. just an example.
"British" is typically capitalized when referring to people or things from Britain or the United Kingdom.
The sentence should be capitalized like this: You met many English-speaking Russians on your trip.
Yes, because British is a propernou n.
Yes, "I am" is typically capitalized because "I" is a pronoun and should always be capitalized in English.
Plural nouns are not capitalized, unless they are proper nouns.
British is always capitalized.
Never. The word E nglish is always capitalized because it is a proper nou n.
british columbians
"British" is typically capitalized when referring to people or things from Britain or the United Kingdom.
The sentence should be capitalized like this: You met many English-speaking Russians on your trip.
Yes, because British is a propernou n.
The word British should be capitalized.
When it refers to the language, it should always be capitalized.
Yes, in the phrase "English teacher," the word "English" should be capitalized because it is a proper noun referring to the subject being taught. When referring to the language or the nationality, "English" should always be capitalized.
British is a proper noun and should be capitalized.
Just British, not colony. An example:The United States was originally a collection of British colonies.
I assume you mean "Canadian". In English, words derived from a country are capitalized.