Yes, you should capitalize "Merry Christmas" and "Happy New Year" in a letter as they are greetings and proper nouns.
No, holiday is not capitalized in this sentence because it is being used generically to refer to any holiday, not as part of a specific name or title.
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
Yes it should be capitalized
Yes, you should capitalize "Fall of 2008" when referring to the season in a specific year because "Fall" is a proper noun denoting the season and "2008" is a specific year.
At the beginning of a sentence, or if it's a person's given name. "Autumn only visits once a year," complained Julie.
Yes, you should capitalize "Merry Christmas" and "Happy New Year" in a letter as they are greetings and proper nouns.
No, holiday is not capitalized in this sentence because it is being used generically to refer to any holiday, not as part of a specific name or title.
New and Year should be capitalized but resolution should not.
I wish you a Happy New Year in 2010
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
Yes it should be capitalized
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is n ot a proper n ou n.
I am happy.
i wish happy new year to all of u!
It depends on the context of the sentence. If being used as in "He is a senior in college" then you do not capitalize. If used in conjunction with a proper noun, then it is capitalized.
Yes.