As the writer of an original story, I would say you have the freedom to do whatever makes sense to your story. However, if you are aiming for what most people (and editors) would find normal, I would not capitalize "the." You can find similar examples if you se...
For example: "I am happy." "I" is always capitalized in writing, regardless of its position in a sentence. "I" in English refers to the speaker. It's the first-person singular pronoun and is used as the subject of a sentence, like "I am happy." Always capitalize "I" in writing,...
Do not capitalize an article (a, an, the)unless it is first or last in the title. Do not capitalize a coordinating conjunction (and, or, nor, but, for, yet, so) unless it is first or last in the title. Do not capitalize the word to, with or without an infinitive, unless it is...
Do You Capitalize the Word ‘God’? One of the most common questions people ask about religious words is whether to capitalize the word “god.” The name or title of any specific deity is capitalized just like any other name, so when “God” is used to refer to “the ...
The Open API Economy: What Is It and How Do I Capitalize On It?Laura Olson
Discus and support Windows Speech Recognition; how do I capitalize? in Windows 10 Software and Apps to solve the problem; Using Windows speech recognition, I find that many of the commands simply do not work. It recognizes the commands perfectly but spells them out instead... Discussion in '...
“Always capitalize Indigenous, Aboriginal, First Nation, Inuit, Métis as a sign of respect the same way that English, French and Spanish etc are capitalized.” Google search volume: is indigenous capitalized (250); capitalize indigenous (100); do you capitalize indigenous (50); when to capita...
Hello. i'm not much of a writer, actually i never write so i'm not sure and more over the Resume is a different beast.. what are the rules for capitalization in resumes?? Anyone know? What exactly do i capitalize and what do i dont. ...
"Hard" and "soft" are opposite in meaning, but " hardly" and " softly"aren't. And do you read the 7( capitalize)"WHO" in a medical report as the "who" in"Who's that?" All the examples tell us that English 8( invent) by people and it 9(reflect) the creativity of the human...
In American English, the general rule is to not capitalize the first word after a semicolon, unless it is a proper noun or an acronym. For example: “I love to read books; Jane Austen is my favorite author.” Note that the word “Austen” is capitalized because it is a proper noun....