No, because it is a preposition and it is fewer than five letters. But if it is the first or last word of the title then it should be capitalized. Examples: From Russia with Love Love from Texas
Yes, like book or movie titles, etc., we also capitalize the titles of paintings.
In most cases, 'not' is not capitalized in titles unless it is the first word or a proper noun. It's typically treated as a regular word within a title.
Yes, the word "observance" should be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence or in titles.
In titles, the word "that" is typically not capitalized unless it is the first word of the title or part of a proper noun.
No.
"Contraption" is perhaps a blend of "contrivance", "trap", and "invention".
Get that contraption off the road! I haven't any spare time to work on your contraption this week.
If it is the first word in the title, yes.
Example sentence - We could not figure out what the odd contraption was used for or where it came from.
Contrapion is not a word in the English language. Contraption is a word. A sentence that uses contraption could be, "Henry rigged up a contraption to catch mice".
Rube Goldberg is infamous for his convoluted contraptions. Kindly remove your dilapidated contraption from the road at once!
The do it yourself handyman devised a contraption to measure the amount of rainfall in his apple orchard.
A contraption is another word for a (contrived) device, so a sentence with that word could be, " In order to bend the wooden strips into the shape of the canoe we were building, I had to first steam them and then place them in a CONTRAPTION called a 'jig', which put force on the ends to bend them, while holding the center in a fixed position."
Inventors are always trying to come up with some new contraption which will turn out to be in great demand by the general public.
It is used in many books, and in many book titles. The 2014 book Tried is a suspense thriller by J.L. Wilson.
No, not all books have quotation marks in the title. Quotation marks are used in book titles to set off a specific phrase or word, and it is not a requirement for all book titles to have them.