Both words should be capitalized as it is a proper Noun-clause- as would be Statue of Liberty. Hope ( one-time owner-jeweler) modifies Diamond. by the way there was a burlesque actress called Hope Diamond, so-called from her Cleavage ( as has the precious stone) When I was a kid I knew about Cleavage in rocks before learning the dirty term- I can recall telling Dad- different rocks have different levels of cleavage- he responded -(don"t use that word around Mother!) So it goes. Anoth lovely Blue Diamond ( all things the same- the most valuable) is the Star of Italy which is a ten carat Blue Teardrop. It is believed to be in the possesion of a famous movie star.
It should only be capitalized if it is the full proper title of a company.
At the beginning of every new sentence or a full stop.
Mrs and Jone should be capitalized. If 'language arts' is the full (official) title of the class then it should be capitalized too.
If you speak of "the judge," the word should not be capitalized. But when you write of "Judge Smith" the word should be capitized. Likewise, if you quote someone as having said, "Yes, Judge, I did," it would be capitizalized.
No. A word which is not a proper noun is only capitalised at the start of a sentence - after a full stop (period).
It should only be capitalized when you are writing the full title of the bill.
It should only be capitalized if it is used as a title. For example, when it follows a name. It should also be the full, proper title that is capitalized such as Bachelor of Science.
Yes it should be capitalized if it's the full title.
It should only be capitalized if it is the full proper title of a company.
At the beginning of every new sentence or a full stop.
Mrs and Jone should be capitalized. If 'language arts' is the full (official) title of the class then it should be capitalized too.
The full name of the element does not need to be capitalized, unless there is some independent grammatical reason for capitalization such as being in a title or the first word of a sentence. Thee chemical symbol for phosphorus, however, should be the single capital letter P.
No, you don't. Unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or it is part of a title. For example, in the college major Liberal Arts & Sciences, you do capitalize arts because it's part of the title.
It should only be capitalized if it's part of a full official name.For example:The 2012 Grammar Conference.I'm looking forward to going to the conference.In the first example, the word conference is part of the title and so it should be capitalized.In the second example, it's not being used as a title and so it shouldn't be capitalized.
Not normally.The term Immigration would only be capitalized if it was the first word in a sentence or part of the name of an organization such as UK Visas and Immigration in Britain, Department of Immigration and Border Protection (DIBP) in Australia, or U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) in the USA
do I have to have full coverage if the title is in my name
yes