Every sentence begins with a capital letter.
No, "homework" does not need a capital letter unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or used in a title.
The first word of a new sentence should always be capitalized.
No, a comma does not require a capital letter after it in standard English punctuation rules. You only capitalize the first letter of a new sentence or proper noun.
"Holiday" should start with a capital letter when it is used as the first word in a sentence or as a proper noun, such as "Christmas holiday."
Every sentence begins with a capital letter.
no. only the first letter should be in capital
The pronoun "I" is always capitalized. All other pronouns are capitalized only when the first word in a sentence.
No, "homework" does not need a capital letter unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or used in a title.
The first word of a new sentence should always be capitalized.
A capitol of a country needs a capital on the first letter.
Unless it is the first word in a sentence. Otherwise - no capital letter
The first letter of a person's name is always a capital letter.
The first letter of summer is not capitalized unless it is the first letter of a sentence or part of a title, et ecetera.
The first word of a sentence must start with a capital letter. There are millions of ways to start a sentence!
No. Cauliflower cheese is not a proper noun and only the word cauliflower would have a capital on the first letter if it started a sentence.
It is axiomatic that a sentence starts with a capital letter for the first word and ends with a full stop.