yes
Yes, if you are using "Pop" as a proper noun to directly address your father, then it should be capitalized in a sentence. For example: "Pop, can you help me with my homework?"
No, you do not capitalize "little" in this context. It remains lowercase unless it is the first word of the sentence.
In Bicolano, you would call father "amá" or "ama".
You can call father “ପିତା” (pita) in Oriya.
"She slept." "They laughed." "He sighed."
The British call the dot at the end of a sentence a "full stop."
Yes, but as it is a title, I would also capitalize it as 'The Dribblers'.
No, you do not capitalize "little" in this context. It remains lowercase unless it is the first word of the sentence.
i know this because i am English . Instead of santa clause we call him father Christmas
The Holy Bible says in the New Testament not to call anyone father, except for God. So if someone at your church, such as a priest wants to be called father as a religious title, go by what the Bible says instead and just call the priest by his surname.
The boy was reluctant to call his father about the car accident because he knew he'd be in trouble.
As a reference, no. but if that's what you call them, then yes
Thier father was Joseph Jackson. When the Jacksons became famous their dad told them, instead of dad, to call him Joseph because he was their manager.
The sentence is not right. It does not use the structure English-speaking countries would use, especially the word leisure. We use the word time to describe all kinds of 'time'. Instead, you should write: When you get some time, call me. When you have time, call me. Call me when you have time.
No, there is no reason to capitalize 'precedent' (which should actually be the form 'precedence' as used here) in your sentence. The word precedent is a common noun; for it to be a proper noun and a need to capitalize it, it would have to be the name or title of someone or something specific. The term 'One on One Call' appears to be the name of a specific group and is therefor a proper noun and it should be capitalized. Your sentence should read: If both of the meetings conflict, the sales meeting will take precedence over the One on One Call.
You would only have to capitalize the O. The construction is rare, but grammatical."On call for more than eighteen hours, the doctor finally decided to take a short nap."Normally, you would proceed the adjective phrase with Having been.
What does a tuba call its father? ooompapa
Your father's father is your grandfather.