Not necessarily. For example, The candidate acted in a presidential manner.
But if it relates to the office or position of the President, then yes. For example:
We hung the Presidential Seal on the podium, but it crashed to the floor.
if you are saying 'President obama' then president shuold be capitilized.
if your saying 'the president' then it should not be capotilized
If you say, "a president." Then you do not capitalize.
If you say, "President Obama." Then you capitalize.
Yes, President is a title just like professor. Its acceptable to not capitalize these words when they are not describing someone. EX: the history professor is really difficult. But when it is not a noun, and is however, a pronoun you should capitalize it. With the exception of President and Doctor. These should for the most part always capitalized.
If you are addressing someone as the president then yes you do capitalize it.
no
No
Yes it should be capitalized.
Yes, President is a title just like professor. Its acceptable to not capitalize these words when they are not describing someone. EX: the history professor is really difficult. But when it is not a noun, and is however, a pronoun you should capitalize it. With the exception of President and Doctor. These should for the most part always capitalized.
No, you should not. You should only capitalize a word when it is at the start of a sentence or when it is a proper noun.
Yes.
No you don't.
If you are addressing someone as the president then yes you do capitalize it.
Yes it should be capitalized.
Yes, you should capitalize 'President' when it refers to a specific person ('The President of the United States'). It should be left uncapitalized when it is non-specific (Past presidents have included ... ').
No.
no
No
Yes
You only capitalize with if it begins a sentence. Example:With recent rains, crops should grow well.