Mr. Grosskreuz/Mr. Richards – English 3 Collab. Name: ______________________________ Grammar and Syntax Period: ______ Date: _________________ Capitalization Rules 1. Use capital letters at the beginning of sentences. Whenever you begin a sentence, the first word needs to be capitalized, as I have done in this sentence. The first word of each line of a poem is also typically capitalized, even if the poem’s lines are not complete sentences. When a sentence appears in parenthesis within another sentence, the sentence in parenthesis should not begin with a capital letter. For example: Some parents go so far as to have their children regularly tested for drugs (for example, Jeff’s parents take him to a drug treatment clinic for testing every Friday) in order to keep them out of drug court. 2. Use capital letters for significant words in titles. Capitalize the first letter of every word in a title, except for articles (a, an, the), conjunctions (for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so), and short prepositions (unless one is the first word of a title), as in the following: Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix The Complete Works of William Shakespeare “The Pledge of Allegiance” “Active Learning with Online Context-Based Modules” 3. Use capital letters for names, titles, and proper adjectives. When referring to someone by name or title, you need to capitalize the first letter. However, if the title is not being used as a proper noun, it is not capitalized. This holds true both for professional titles (such as doctor or professor) and for family relationships (such as mom or uncle). Unless the word is part of the person’s name, do not use a capital letter. Here are some examples: My physician, Dr. Janice Brown, is married to Dr. Paul Earnest, Jr. He is also a doctor who specializes in family medicine. My advisor, Professor Thomas, has an aunt who is also a professor. My Aunt Mary wanted to be a professor, but she never completed graduate school. 4. Use capital letters to indicate race, ethnicity, and languages. You should use a capital letter when referring to a language, or a religious, national, or ethnic name. Here are some examples: Hinduism Christianity Islam Hispanic Asian African-American English French Russian 5. Use capital letters for proper names of directions, places, and geographic features. You should use a capital letter for a place name or geographic feature (Detroit, the Missouri River). If you are referring to a compass point (northwest, southeast), however, do not use a capital letter, unless you are incorporating the direction as part of the proper name of the location. Here are some examples: North Dakota is a state bordering Minnesota in the Midwest. She lives to the northwest of us on Elm Street. Lake Erie is one of the Great Lakes. 6. Use capital letters for events, times, and eras, but not seasons. You should capitalize the names of historic events. World War I, Dark Ages, Boston Tea Party It is not necessary to capitalize the seasons of the year. spring, summer, fall, winter You should capitalize the names of days, months, holidays, and eras. Friday, Christmas, the Neolithic Era 7. Use capital letters for organizations, companies, and products. You should capitalize the names of organizations, companies, and products. For internal capitalization, follow the convention of the company or organization, as in these examples: the United Nations Microsoft Corporation University of Buffalo Boeing 737 iPhone 6s QuarkXPress MS-DOS Internet Titles – Are they underlined, in italics, or surrounded by quotation marks? 1. Use quotation marks for titles of short works (poems, short stories, essays, skits, monologues, songs, commercials, television episodes, 1-2 page handouts, articles in magazines, newspapers, and encyclopedias). “Blank Space” “The Raven” “Hillary’s lead shrinks” “The Most Dangerous Game” “Livin’ on a Prayer” “Hot Fashion Deals” 2. When handwriting, underline titles of long works (epic/book-length poems, novels, collection of poems and essays, albums, plays, films, television series, encyclopedias, magazines, newspapers, pamphlets). When typing, italicize them. The Life of Pablo Star Wars: The Force Awakens Seventeen Fresh Off the Boat Newsday The Diary of Anne Frank
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