No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is
n
ot a proper
n
ou
n.
Yes, you capitalize the word "Constitution," but the word "constitutional" would be lowercase.
No, 'government contract' doesn't require to be capitalized.
Yes, "Federal Prosecutor" should be capitalized when referring to the official title of the position.
Yes...see the entry under - "Should you use a capital letter for the word government?" Same deal applies here.
No it shouldn't be capitalized in this instance.
Yes. It should be --- Federal Bank.
Section should be capitalized at the beginning of a sentence or paragraph, if it is a proper noun (specifically naming something) or if it is part of a trademark.
Yes; "Your Honor" should always be capitalized.
Yes, you capitalize the word "Constitution," but the word "constitutional" would be lowercase.
No, 'government contract' doesn't require to be capitalized.
Yes, "Federal Prosecutor" should be capitalized when referring to the official title of the position.
Yes...see the entry under - "Should you use a capital letter for the word government?" Same deal applies here.
No it shouldn't be capitalized in this instance.
Yes, the title "Heads of Government" should be capitalized when referring to specific individuals in their role as the leader of a government. For example, "The Heads of Government agreed to the new trade deal."
Yes, the branches of government such as the Executive, Legislative, and Judicial branches should be capitalized when referring to them as specific entities within a paper.
Write a.k.a. is fine as long as it doesn't start the sentence or paragraph.
Regulation should be capitalized when referring to a specific official rule or law, such as "the Building Code Regulations." It is not capitalized when used in a general sense, such as "government regulations."