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Learn which special words need a capital letter at the start!
Have you ever looked at a map? You might see words like Texas or Pacific Ocean. Those words start with big letters! That is because they are special names. A long, long time ago, people started using capital letters to show that a word is a name for one special thing.
Let's look at how this idea grew over time!
So why do we capitalize these words? Because they are proper nouns. A proper noun is a name for one specific person, place, thing, or event. Capital letters tell the reader, "Hey! This is a special name!"
There are three kinds of words you need to capitalize. Let's learn each one!
Look at the picture below. It shows regular words on the left and special names on the right. The special names all start with a capital letter!
Do you see the pattern? The words on the left β holiday, cereal, ocean, country, game β are just regular words. They talk about a type of thing. The words on the right name one specific thing. That is why they start with a capital letter!
Here is a simple way to check if a word needs a capital letter. Ask yourself this question:
Let's try it with some examples:
"I ate a cookie." β The word "cookie" just means any cookie. It is not a special name. Keep it lowercase. β
"I ate an Oreo." β Oreo is the name of one special kind of cookie. It is a product name. Capitalize it! β
"We went to the lake." β The word "lake" just means any lake. Keep it lowercase. β
"We went to Lake Erie." β Lake Erie is the name of one special lake. It is a geographic name. Capitalize both words! β
Here is a fun diagram that shows the steps to follow:
Follow these steps every time you write. Ask each question. If you answer "yes" to any of them, use a capital letter!
Let's look at lots of examples. The table below sorts words into three groups: holidays, product names, and geographic names.
| π Holidays | ποΈ Product Names | πΊοΈ Geographic Names |
|---|---|---|
| Thanksgiving | Crayola | Rocky Mountains |
| Valentine's Day | Nintendo | Pacific Ocean |
| Fourth of July | Lego | New York |
| Halloween | Oreo | Africa |
| Easter | Band-Aid | Mississippi River |
| New Year's Day | Kleenex | Lake Superior |
Notice that every single name in this table starts with a capital letter. Some names have two or more words, like Valentine's Day or Rocky Mountains. When a name has more than one word, you capitalize the important words. Little words like "of" or "the" may stay lowercase if they are in the middle.
Here is a sentence with some mistakes. Let's find and fix them step by step.
A common noun is a regular word for any person, place, or thing. A proper noun is the special name for one specific person, place, or thing. Let's compare them!
| Common Noun (lowercase) | Proper Noun (CAPITAL) | Why Capitalize? |
|---|---|---|
| holiday | Easter | It names one special holiday |
| shoes | Nike | It names one special brand |
| state | Florida | It names one special state |
| river | Amazon River | It names one special river |
| toy | Barbie | It names one special toy brand |
| day | Memorial Day | It names one special day |
Here is a tricky part. Sometimes the same word can be common or proper! The word "lake" is common, but Lake Michigan is proper. The word "mountain" is common, but Mount Rushmore is proper. It all depends on whether you are naming one specific thing.
You are learning some really important rules right now! As you keep growing as a reader and writer, you will learn about even more words that need capital letters. Here is a peek at what comes next:
| What You Know Now | What You'll Learn Next |
|---|---|
| Capitalize holiday names (Thanksgiving) | Capitalize days and months (Monday, January) |
| Capitalize product names (Lego) | Capitalize book and movie titles (Charlotte's Web) |
| Capitalize geographic names (Lake Erie) | Capitalize names of countries, languages, and nationalities (Spanish) |
All of these words follow the same big idea: when a word is a special name, give it a capital letter. The rule you learned today will help you with all of these in the future!
Try these on your own! Click "Show Answer" when you are ready to check.
Today you learned that some words are special because they are names. We call these proper nouns. There are three kinds you practiced: holiday names like Thanksgiving and Halloween, product names like Crayola and Lego, and geographic names like the Rocky Mountains and Lake Erie. All of these words start with a capital letter because they name one specific thing.
When a name has more than one word, remember to capitalize each important word. Regular words that do not name something specific β like "holiday," "toy," or "river" β stay lowercase. If you are ever unsure, just ask: "Is this the name of one special thing?" If the answer is yes, give it a capital letter! You now have a superpower for writing clearly and correctly. Keep practicing, and it will become easy! π