|
Capitalization is
an very important thing to uses in American literature. This sites is just to
inform people( mainly middle/high school students) on how to uses capitalization
the right way. I know what you're thinking why would an eight grader make a site
on capitalization, but on this sites there will be links for games that you can
go to and help you on capitalization. There is a list of rules for
capitalization on my page. The rules are as followed:
- The first word of a sentence: Some spiders are poisonous; others are not.
Are you my new neighbor?
- The first word of a direct quotation, except when the quotation is split:
Joyce asked, “Do you think that the lecture was interesting?” “No,” I
responded, “it was very boring.” Tom Paine said, “The sublime and the
ridiculous are often so nearly related that it is difficult to class them
separately.”
- The first word of each line in a poem in traditional verse: Half a league,
half a league,/Half a league onward,/All in the valley of Death/Rode the six
hundred.—Alfred, Lord Tennyson
- The names of people, of organizations and their members, of councils and
congresses, and of historical periods and events: Marie Curie, Benevolent and
Protective Order of Elks, an Elk, Protestant Episcopal Church, an
Episcopalian, the Democratic Party, a Democrat, the Nuclear Regulatory
Commission, the U.S. Senate, the Middle Ages, World War I, the Battle of
Britain.
- The names of places and geographic divisions, districts, regions, and
locales: Richmond, Vermont, Argentina, Seventh Avenue, London Bridge, Arctic
Circle, Eastern Hemisphere, Continental Divide, Middle East, Far North, Gulf
States, East Coast, the North, the South Shore. Do not capitalize words
indicating compass points unless a specific region is referred to: Turn north
onto Interstate 91.
- The names of rivers, lakes, mountains, and oceans: Ohio River, Lake Como,
Rocky Mountains, Atlantic Ocean.
- The names of ships, aircraft, satellites, and space vehicles: U.S.S.
Arizona, Spirit of St. Louis, the spy satellite Ferret-D,
Voyager II, the space shuttle Challenger.
- The names of nationalities, races, tribes, and languages: Spanish, Maori,
Bantu, Russian.
- Words derived from proper names, except in their extended senses: the
Byzantine Empire. But: byzantine office politics.
- Words indicating family relationships when used with a person's name as a
title: Aunt Toni and Uncle Jack. But: my aunt and uncle, Toni and Jack
Walker.
- A title (i.e., civil, judicial, military, royal and noble, religious, and
honorary) when preceding a name: Justice Marshall, General Jackson, Mayor
Daley, Queen Victoria, Lord Mountbatten, Pope John Paul II, Professor
Jacobson, Senator Byrd.
- References to specific presidents and vice presidents of the United
States, but lower case references that are general: Vice President John
Adams went on to become our second president.
- All key words in titles of literary, dramatic, artistic, and musical
works: the novel The Old Man and the Sea, the short story “Notes from
Underground,” an article entitled “On Passive Verbs,” James Dickey's poem “In
the Tree House at Night,” the play Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Van Gogh's
Wheat Field and Cypress Trees, Beethoven's Emperor Concerto.
- The in the title of a newspaper if it is a part of the title:
The Wall Street Journal. But: the New York Daily News.
- The first word in the salutation and in the complimentary close of a
letter: My dear Carol, Yours sincerely.
- Epithets and substitutes for the names of people and places: Old Hickory,
Old Blood and Guts, The Oval Office, the Windy City.
- Words used in personifications: When is not Death at watch/Within those
secret waters?/What wants he but to catch/Earth's heedless sons and
daughters?—Edmund Blunden
- The pronoun I: I told them that I had heard the news.
- Names for the Deity and sacred works: God, the Almighty, Jesus, Allah, the
Supreme Being, the Bible, the Qu'ran, the Talmud.
- Days of the week, months of the year, holidays, and holy days: Tuesday,
May, Independence Day, Passover, Ramadan, Christmas.
- The names of specific courts: the Supreme Court of the United States, the
Massachusetts Appeals Court, the United States Court of Appeals for the First
Circuit.
- The names of treaties, accords, pacts, laws, and specific amendments:
Panama Canal Treaty, Treaty of Paris, Geneva Accords, Warsaw Pact countries,
Sherman Antitrust Law, Labor Management Relations Act, took the Fifth
Amendment.
- Registered trademarks and service marks: Day-Glo®, Comsat®.
- The names of geologic eras, periods, epochs, and strata and the names of
prehistoric divisions: Paleozoic Era, Precambrian, Pleistocene, Age of
Reptiles, Bronze Age, Stone Age.
- The names of constellations, planets, and stars: Milky Way, Southern
Crown, Saturn, Jupiter, Uranus, Polaris.
- Genus but not species names in binomial nomenclature: Rana pipiens.
- New Latin names of classes, families, and all groups higher than genera in
botanical and zoological nomenclature: Nematoda. Do not capitalize
derivatives from such names: nematodes.
|