The word "math" is typically not capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title where capitalization rules apply.
You would capitalize "science" only if it is the first word in the sentence. Examples: Science is my niece's favorite subject. Ralph was always quick to answer, with answers not based in science.
In general, you do not need to capitalize class subjects unless they are proper nouns or the first word of a sentence. For example, you would capitalize "English" but not "mathematics" in a paragraph.
Yes.
In American English, capitalize the first letter if the text within the quotation marks is a complete sentence. For British English, capitalize only when the quoted text is a complete sentence that starts a new line.
No.
The word "math" is typically not capitalized unless it is at the beginning of a sentence or part of a title where capitalization rules apply.
No, you do not capitalize bachelor's degree in this sense.
You underline or italicize them.
You would capitalize "science" only if it is the first word in the sentence. Examples: Science is my niece's favorite subject. Ralph was always quick to answer, with answers not based in science.
In general, you do not need to capitalize class subjects unless they are proper nouns or the first word of a sentence. For example, you would capitalize "English" but not "mathematics" in a paragraph.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is n ot a proper n ou n.
Yes.
In American English, capitalize the first letter if the text within the quotation marks is a complete sentence. For British English, capitalize only when the quoted text is a complete sentence that starts a new line.
You do not capitalize chickenpox in a sentence. The exception is if the word is the first in the sentence.
If you are talking about it as a field of study you would capitalize it, but if you say I study math in general then not capitalized
No, you do not capitalize "first birthday" in a sentence.