Some interesting coffee books:
most of these are fictional books for children or young adults
The Bug in Teacher's Coffee: And Other School Poems by Kalli Dakos and Mike Reed
The Coffee Can Kid by Jan Czech
The Kidnapping of the Coffee Pot by K. Saari and Henri Galeron
The Lady Who Put Salt in Her Coffee by Lucretia Hale
Tears at Fort Coffee! (Chickasaw Adventures) by Jen Murvin Edwards and Tom Lyle
Garfield's Guide to Coffee Mornings by Jim Davis
Mr Frumble's Coffee Shop Disaster by Richard Scarry
The Story of Coffee by Sultan Mohamed
These are 'romantic' coffee books:
Coffee, Tea or Me -- Poems from the Heart by Veronica R. Edmiston
Barbara Streisand says this book title in The Mirror Has Two Faces
A book with green in the title is Anne of Green Gables.
The book found with the most syllables for a one word title is Anonymity which has five syllables. The book was written by Amber Lea Easton. Another one word book title with five syllables is Metamorphoses by Ovid.
Inkheart?
The word title is the noun that names a book.
If it is the first word in the title, yes.
The Phantom Tollbooth
To cite a book title in APA format, you should italicize the title and capitalize the first letter of the first word, the first word after a colon, and proper nouns.
The book's title is "Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows".
One popular book with the word "Bridge" in the title is "The Bridge on the River Kwai" by Pierre Boulle.
No, the word lunch is not capitalized in a sentence. You would only capitalize it if it was part of a title (e.g. it was a word in a book title).
Yes, book names are typically capitalized. The first word, last word, and all other important words in the title should be capitalized. However, conjunctions, articles, and prepositions are usually not capitalized unless they are the first word of the title.
'weird' is the word