Yes, "Swiss" and "ambassador" should both be capitalized when referring to the Swiss Ambassador as a proper noun.
Yes, "Swiss cheese" is typically capitalized because Swiss refers to the type of cheese rather than the country.
This has two different trains of thought. Chicago Style - do not capitalize the name of a drink unless it is directly associated with the name of the drink. To use another food example - Swiss cheese should only be capitalized if it actually comes from Switzerland, other than that it is swiss cheese. So - manhattan, white russian and bloody mary should not be capitalized as a rule.
Yes you do. German, like Swiss in 'Swiss cheese', would be capitalized no matter where in the sentence it is found. Proper noun rule and proper adjective rule should be checked when in doubt.
Yes, Was it a dog? Hahaha It WAS capitalized! Was can be capitalized.
The Queen appointed a new ambassador.He was proud to be the school ambassador for his age group.
Swiss should be capitalized; coworker should not be capitalized.
Yes
Yes, only the proper name "Swiss" is capitalized; cheese is a common noun.
Yes, "Swiss cheese" is typically capitalized because Swiss refers to the type of cheese rather than the country.
Swiss. It is also always capitalized.
Yash Chopra
No. it's not necessary. Example: Let's have dinner at 7 p.m.
Capitalize o nly S i n the word Swiss because it is a proper nou n. It should be Swiss border.
This has two different trains of thought. Chicago Style - do not capitalize the name of a drink unless it is directly associated with the name of the drink. To use another food example - Swiss cheese should only be capitalized if it actually comes from Switzerland, other than that it is swiss cheese. So - manhattan, white russian and bloody mary should not be capitalized as a rule.
Yes you do. German, like Swiss in 'Swiss cheese', would be capitalized no matter where in the sentence it is found. Proper noun rule and proper adjective rule should be checked when in doubt.
no gambhir shoud not be banned Watson shoud be banned
Currencies should not be capitalized. So it is dollars, euros, yen, etc. However, if the name of the county is included in the name of the currency, that part of the name is capitalized, and you therefore have the Swiss franc or the Zimbabwe dollar. If the title of the country is inferred, TT dollar (Trinidad and Tobago dollar), CFA franc (Central African Republic franc), it is also capitalized. (Source: The Economist Style Guide.)