No, "secretary" is not capitalized in minutes unless it is part of a specific title before a person's name (e.g., Secretary Smith).
No, because it is n ot a proper n ou n.
The likely word here is correctly spelled "secretary" (assistant). When used for a member of the President's Cabinet, it is capitalized Secretary.
Yes, board meeting minutes should be capitalized as it is a formal document and follows proper grammar rules.
Minutes are not typically capitalized unless they are part of a title or at the beginning of a sentence. For example, "Meeting Minutes" or "Minutes of the Meeting."
No, it's not necessary.
Yes, and so should the word secretary, so it would be "Secretary of the Treasury".
It shouldn't be capitalized when it doesn't directly precede the name of the secretary of state.
No, because it is n ot a proper n ou n.
The likely word is "secretary" which is typically a clerical support or assistant's position in business. The capitalized form (e.g. Secretary of Defense) is the head of a cabinet department in the US executive branch.
The likely word here is correctly spelled "secretary" (assistant). When used for a member of the President's Cabinet, it is capitalized Secretary.
Yes, board meeting minutes should be capitalized as it is a formal document and follows proper grammar rules.
Minutes are not typically capitalized unless they are part of a title or at the beginning of a sentence. For example, "Meeting Minutes" or "Minutes of the Meeting."
No, it's not necessary.
Secretary of the meeting. Secretary of the Board Meeting
A person working in an office setting may be a secretary. If it's a high-ranking official (Secretary of State), it's usually capitalized.
The secretary does. That is what they do at my school! :)
The "R" of respectfully is capitalized at the end of minutes.