It isn't capitalized as it isn't a place name or the name of a person/being. Unless of course it is at the beginning of a sentence, though I don't feel that having season at the beginning of a sentence would be a complete sentence.
Instead the beginning of the sentence would be:
The seasons .....
A season....
All seasons......
In the seasons...
etc etc.
++++++++++++++
You may be right, but your rationale doesn't hold water. If capitalization is only applied to place names and persons/beings, then the months of the year and days of the week should not be capitalized.
There are most of the time, but if your writing, no. This is because a season has been going on ever since Earth began, and it doesn't matter to humans much since the seasons never change, or go out of order.
yes
It should be capitalized when it is used in place of the person's name. In other words, it should be capitalized when it is not preceded by a possessive pronoun.
No, yellow brick road is not capitalized in "The Wizard of Oz."Specifically, the phrase is not capitalized in the original 1900 book edition of "The Wizard of Oz." But it is capitalized in the script to the beloved 1939 film version of the children's story. Additionally, the phrase comes from the script instead of the book, where it tends to be called a road paved with yellow brick or a yellow brick path.
Each item should only be capitalized if they are proper nouns, titles etc. If it wouldn't normally have a capital letter then don't capitalize it in a list.
Yes, "Winter" is capitalized when referring to the season.
No, "holy season" does not require to be capitalized.
Winter is typically capitalized when referring to the season itself, as in "Winter is a cold season." However, it does not need to be capitalized when describing the weather or a general winter occurrence, as in "I don't like cold winters."
"post season" is fine, it shouldn't be capitalized.
No it shouldn't be capitalized. Seasons aren't capitalized.
Yes, season names are capitalized when writing.
Seasons are only capitalized when they form part of a title.
Not usually. Unless the word starts a sentence or is adjoining a capitalized title. I'm assuming you're referring to the season "fall".
It is capitalized at the beginning of the sentence or when it forms part of the proper noun. Examples: Summer Sonata Wisconsin Spring Restaurant
Yes, Fall 2011 should be capitalized because Fall refers to a specific season, and 2011 is a proper noun denoting a specific year.
Noel is capitalized, both a male christian name and in reference to the birthday of Christ
No, "fall" should not be capitalized unless it is used at the beginning of a sentence. It is a common noun, not a proper noun.