You should capitalize a one-word answer to a question when that word would normally be capitalized in a sentence, such as for proper nouns or the pronoun "I." Otherwise, no additional capitalization is needed for one-word answers.
Only at the beginning of a sentence. It is a place, but it's like "school." You don't capitalize "school" when it's in the middle of a sentence.
No, "dad" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence unless it begins a sentence or is used as part of a proper noun, like a title.
No, the word 'my' is not capitalized in a sentence unless it is the first word of the sentence or if it is part of a proper noun.
Typically, titles of paragraphs are not capitalized unless they fall at the beginning of a sentence or if they contain proper nouns or titles.
yes
You should capitalize a one-word answer to a question when that word would normally be capitalized in a sentence, such as for proper nouns or the pronoun "I." Otherwise, no additional capitalization is needed for one-word answers.
No. School district is not a proper and should only be capitalized when placed at the beginning of a sentence, such as this one.
Only at the beginning of a sentence. It is a place, but it's like "school." You don't capitalize "school" when it's in the middle of a sentence.
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 can capitalize it when it is at the begining of a sentence, or if some one is named "You". (Which is very unlikely) Here is another tip: Look at the beginning of this whole paragraph, the word "You" is capitalized.
From a grammarian standpoint, one should capitalize Crucifix as it is a religious article as one would capitalize God and His Judgement, for example the use of the proper adjective, in capitals is desirable also with reference to Church officials, such as the Pope, Cardinals, and so on, the courtesy stands out, flags attention as it were, and avoids any confusion.
Standard style and usage says that you do. This has not always been the case, however. There are examples from the King James Bible where the interrogative is used in mid-sentence with no upper-case following it. If you want your writing to appear professional and competent, use the interrogative to end the sentence, and start a new one with an upper-case letter.
Capitalization and punctuation are optional when using single words or phrases in bulleted form. If each bullet or numbered point is a complete sentence, capitalize the first word and end each sentence with proper ending punctuation. The rule of thumb is to be consistent. Use a colon instead of a semicolon between two sentences when the second sentence explains or illustrates the first sentence and no coordinating conjunction is being used to connect the sentences. If only one sentence follows the colon, do not capitalize the first word of the new sentence. If two or more sentences follow the colon, capitalize the first word of each sentence following.
No, "dad" should not be capitalized in the middle of a sentence unless it begins a sentence or is used as part of a proper noun, like a title.
No, the word 'my' is not capitalized in a sentence unless it is the first word of the sentence or if it is part of a proper noun.
Typically, titles of paragraphs are not capitalized unless they fall at the beginning of a sentence or if they contain proper nouns or titles.