Yes, "county" should be capitalized when it appears before the name, as in "County of Floyd."
Yes, you should capitalize "room" when referring to a specific room before the room number. For example: Room 101.
Yes, "Professor" should be capitalized when it is used before a person's name as a title. For example: Professor Smith.
Yes, "Chef" should be capitalized when used as a title or before someone's name. For example, "Chef Gordon Ramsay" or "Executive Chef Smith."
"Mama" should be capitalized when it is used as a proper noun or as a title before a name, for example "Mama Jane." If it is used more generally to refer to one's mother, it does not need to be capitalized, for example "my mama."
"Prophet" should be capitalized when it appears before a name as part of the title, e.g., Prophet Muhammad. It is also capitalized if it is a specific title within a religious context, such as Prophet in Islam.
Yes, you should capitalize "room" when referring to a specific room before the room number. For example: Room 101.
Yes, "Professor" should be capitalized when it is used before a person's name as a title. For example: Professor Smith.
Yes, "Chef" should be capitalized when used as a title or before someone's name. For example, "Chef Gordon Ramsay" or "Executive Chef Smith."
"Mama" should be capitalized when it is used as a proper noun or as a title before a name, for example "Mama Jane." If it is used more generally to refer to one's mother, it does not need to be capitalized, for example "my mama."
"Prophet" should be capitalized when it appears before a name as part of the title, e.g., Prophet Muhammad. It is also capitalized if it is a specific title within a religious context, such as Prophet in Islam.
You should capitalize the "S" in "Shareholders" when using it as a title before a specific group's name, like "ABC Company Shareholders."
No, you do not capitalize marine biologist in a sentence. (Unless marine is in the beginning of the sentence)
Mrs and Jone should be capitalized. If 'language arts' is the full (official) title of the class then it should be capitalized too.
You should capitalize if the use applies to a specific congress (US Congress or a similarly named body). Example : "Our class studied the history of congressional assemblies." Example : "The company's directors were called before a Congressional committee."
Admiral is capitalized when it is part of the propernoun or when it precedes aname of a person.Example:Admiral John Smith
Capitalize titles in writing and grammar when they come before a person's name, as in "President Lincoln." However, do not capitalize titles when they are used generically, like "the president announced a new policy."
Yes, "inmate" should be capitalized when used before a name as it is considered part of the title or designation.