Home

Tutoring

Subjects

Live Classes

Study Coach

Essay Review

On-Demand Courses

Colleges

Games

Opening subject page...

Loading your content

  1. 1st Grade Writing
  2. Capitalize Dates and Names of People

AaBb
1ST GRADE ELA โ€ข LANGUAGE

Capitalize Dates and Names of People

Learn why some words start with a big letter โ€” and how to write names and dates the right way!

Section 1

Why Do We Use Capital Letters?

A long, long time ago, people wrote every letter the same size. It was hard to tell where a new sentence began. It was also hard to know if a word was a person's name or just a regular word. Over many years, writers started making some letters bigger to show that a word was special. We call these capital letters (or uppercase letters).

Capital letters help us read and understand sentences. They show us what is important โ€” like a person's name or the name of a month. Let's look at how this idea grew!

Long Ago
People wrote with all the same-sized letters. There were no big letters and no small letters!
Hundreds of Years Ago
Writers began using taller letters at the start of sentences. This made reading much easier.
A Long Time Ago
People started using big letters for names too. If you saw a big letter, you knew the word was a name โ€” like a person or a place!
Today
We follow clear rules about capital letters. Names of people and dates (like months and days) always start with a capital letter.

Today, we will learn the rules for when to use a capital letter for people's names and dates. These rules help everyone read what you write!

Section 2

The Big Rules

There are a few easy rules to remember. A capital letter is the big version of a letter, like A instead of a. We also call it an uppercase letter. Let's learn the four main rules.

1

First Names

A person's first name always starts with a capital letter. Example: Sam, Mia, Ben.
2

Last Names

A person's last name also starts with a capital letter. Example: Smith, Garcia, Lee.
3

Days of the Week

Every day of the week starts with a capital letter. Example: Monday, Friday, Sunday.
4

Months of the Year

Every month starts with a capital letter. Example: January, June, October.
โœฆ Key Takeaway
Think of a capital letter like a crown on a king or queen. Names and dates are special โ€” they are like kings and queens of words. So they get to wear a crown! That crown is the capital letter at the start.
Section 3

See It! Capital Letters in Action

Look at the picture below. It shows you which words need a capital letter and which ones do not. The gold crowns mark the words that must start with a big letter!

WHICH WORDS GET A CAPITAL?Emmawent to school onMonday.๐Ÿ‘‘๐Ÿ‘‘Name of a personDay of the weekJake's birthday is inMarch.Name of a personMonth of the year๐ŸŸก Gold letters = capital letters on special words
Gold letters = capital letters on special words

See how Emma and Jake both start with big letters? That is because they are names of people. And Monday and March start with big letters because they are dates. The other words โ€” like "went," "to," and "school" โ€” are just regular words. They stay small (unless they start a sentence).

Section 4

How It Works โ€” Step by Step

When you write a sentence, ask yourself two easy questions about each word. This will help you decide if the word needs a capital letter.

Question 1
Is this word someone's name? ๐Ÿง’
If YES โ†’ Start it with a capital letter!
Question 2
Is this word a day or a month? ๐Ÿ“…
If YES โ†’ Start it with a capital letter!

Let's try it with a sentence: "I will see anna on tuesday."

Look at each word. "I" โ€” that's always a capital letter (special rule!). "will" โ€” is it a name? No. Is it a day or month? No. Keep it small. "see" โ€” same thing. "anna" โ€” wait! Anna is someone's name. It needs a capital A! "on" โ€” not a name, not a date. Keep it small. "tuesday" โ€” that is a day of the week! It needs a capital T! So the correct sentence is:

I will see Anna on Tuesday.
โœฆ Key Takeaway
Think of yourself as a word detective ๐Ÿ”. Every time you write, look at each word. Ask: "Is this special? Is it a name or a date?" If it is, put a big letter at the start. You are the detective who makes sure every special word gets its crown!
Section 5

Name or Not a Name? Date or Not a Date?

Sometimes it can be tricky to know which words are special. Let's look at a chart that helps you sort it out!

WordCapital Letter?Why?
MariaYes โœ“It is a person's name.
girlNo โœ—It is not a name. It is just a word for any girl.
SeptemberYes โœ“It is a month of the year.
summerNo โœ—It is a season, not a month or day.
WednesdayYes โœ“It is a day of the week.
todayNo โœ—It is not the name of a day.
Mr. BrownYes โœ“Brown is a person's last name.
brownNo โœ—When it is just a color, no capital.
DECISION FLOWCHARTLook at the word โœ๏ธIs it a person's name?(first name or last name)YESCAPITAL!NOIs it a day of the week?(Monday, Tuesday, etc.)YESCAPITAL!NOIs it a month of the year?(January, February, etc.)YESCAPITAL!NOlowercaseFollow the arrows to find out if your word needs a big letter!
Follow the arrows to find out if your word needs a big letter!

Use this flowchart every time you are not sure. Start at the top. Ask each question. If you get a "Yes," the word needs a capital letter. If all answers are "No," keep it lowercase (small).

Section 6

Let's Fix a Sentence Together!

Here is a sentence with some mistakes. Let's fix it step by step.

my friend carlos has a party on saturday in july.

Fix the Sentence

Step 1 โ€” Find the beginning of the sentence

Every sentence starts with a capital letter. The first word is "my." We need to change it to "My."

Step 2 โ€” Look for names of people

The word "carlos" is a person's name! It needs a capital letter. We change it to "Carlos."

Step 3 โ€” Look for days of the week

The word "saturday" is a day of the week. It needs a capital letter. We change it to "Saturday."

Step 4 โ€” Look for months of the year

The word "july" is a month. It needs a capital letter too! We change it to "July."

Step 5 โ€” Check the other words

"friend," "has," "a," "party," "on," and "in" are not names, days, or months. They stay small. Our fixed sentence is:
My friend Carlos has a party on Saturday in July.

Great job! You fixed four words. Every time you write, be a word detective and check for these special words.

Section 7

Watch Out! Easy Mistakes

Some words can trick you. Let's look at what is right and what is wrong.

Wrong โœ—Right โœ“Why?
I saw kim on monday.I saw Kim on Monday.Kim = name, Monday = day
My mom's name is sarah.My mom's name is Sarah.Sarah = name
We go to school in september.We go to school in September.September = month
My Teacher is mrs. jones.My teacher is Mrs. Jones."teacher" is not a name. Mrs. Jones is a name!

Remember: words like "mom," "teacher," "friend," and "boy" are not names by themselves. They are just regular words. But if someone's actual name is there, like Lily or Mr. Park, use a capital letter!

Also remember that seasons (like summer, winter, fall, spring) do not get a capital letter. Only months and days do!

โœฆ Key Takeaway
Think of it like this: if you could put the word on a name tag that someone wears, it needs a capital letter. "Sarah" goes on a name tag. "girl" does not. "Tuesday" would go on a calendar's name tag. "yesterday" would not!
Section 8

What's Next? More Capital Letter Rules!

You just learned to capitalize names of people and dates. But there are even more words that get capital letters! When you are ready, you will also learn about these:

What You Know NowWhat You'll Learn Next
Names of people (Emma, Mr. Lee)Names of places (Texas, Main Street)
Days of the week (Monday)Names of holidays (Thanksgiving)
Months of the year (March)Titles of books (The Cat in the Hat)

The more you practice, the easier it gets. Soon you will spot capital letters everywhere โ€” in books, on signs, and in letters from friends. You are on your way to being a great writer!

Section 9

Practice Time! ๐ŸŽ‰

Try these problems. Click "Show Answer" to check your work.

PROBLEM 1 โ€” WHAT DO YOU KNOW?
Which of these words should ALWAYS start with a capital letter? a) dog b) Tuesday c) happy d) run
PROBLEM 2 โ€” FIND THE MISTAKE
Which word in this sentence needs a capital letter? "I play with emma after school."
PROBLEM 3 โ€” FIX THE SENTENCE
Fix all the mistakes in this sentence: "we will visit grandma rosa on friday in december."
PROBLEM 4 โ€” WRITE YOUR OWN
Write a sentence that uses a person's name and a day of the week. Make sure you capitalize them! Here is a sentence with blanks to help you: "_____ and I will go to the park on _____." (Fill in a friend's name and a day!)
PROBLEM 5 โ€” THINK HARD!
Look at these two sentences. One uses "may" correctly without a capital. The other uses "May" with a capital. Can you explain why? Sentence A: "You may sit down." Sentence B: "My birthday is in May."
Summary

Let's Remember!

You learned that some words are special and need to start with a capital letter โ€” the big version of a letter. Names of people always start with a capital, whether it is a first name like Emma or a last name like Garcia. Days of the week โ€” like Monday, Tuesday, and Sunday โ€” also start with a capital letter. And months of the year โ€” like January, March, and October โ€” always start with one too.

When you write, be a word detective! Ask yourself: "Is this a person's name? Is this a day? Is this a month?" If the answer is yes, put a capital letter at the front. Regular words like "happy," "run," and "big" stay lowercase. Keep practicing, and soon using capital letters will feel as easy as writing your own name! ๐ŸŽ‰

Varsity Tutors โ€ข 1st Grade English Language Arts โ€ข Capitalize Dates and Names of People