Yes, the word "Queen" should be capitalized when referring to a specific queen such as Queen Elizabeth II.
The capital of Senegal is Dakar, the capital of Côte d'Ivoire is Yamoussoukro (with Abidjan being the de facto economic capital), the capital of Burkina Faso is Ouagadougou, the capital of Guinea is Conakry, the capital of Togo is Lomé, the capital of Benin is Porto-Novo (with Cotonou being the administrative and economic capital), the capital of Niger is Niamey, and the capital of Mauritania is Nouakchott.
The capital of Canada is Ottawa.
capital in Tagalog: kapital (in business); kabisera (capital city)
Both "Charles's queen" and "Charles' queen" are correct; the latter is more commonly used to indicate possession when the noun already ends with an "s."
The homophone of "queen" is "quean."
Regina is the capital of the province of Saskatchewan (it means "Queen" in Latin) and Victoria is the capital of the province of British Columbia. Both were named in honour of Queen Victoria.
Victoria, the capital of the Canadian province of British Columbia, and Regina, the capital of the Canadian province Saskatchewan, were both named for Queen Victoria. "Regina" is the Latin word for queen.
The British queen, Queen Victoria, made Ottawa the capital on December 31, 1857.
It's the capital of the country she's queen of.
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The capital cities of both British Columbia (Victoria) and Saskatchewan (Regina) were both named in honour of Queen Victoria.
Yes... Queen is a royal title, and commands a capital letter at the start. England is a country, which always starts with a capital letter.
Victoria, the capital of the Canadian province of British Columbia, and Regina, the capital of the Canadian province Saskatchewan, were both named for Queen Victoria. "Regina" is the Latin word for queen.
The nickname of Helena, Montana is "Queen City" or "Queen City of the Rockies."
No.
Victoria
Victoria