Use Correct Capitalization

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4th Grade ELA › Use Correct Capitalization

Questions 1 - 10
1

Which sentence correctly capitalizes a book title?

We read Charlotte's Web in class today.

We read charlotte's Web in class today.

We Read Charlotte's Web in Class today.

We read Charlotte's web in class today.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, Charlotte's Web is a book title that needs major words capitalized, including the first and last words and important nouns. Choice B is correct because it capitalizes Charlotte's Web (book title, with important words in uppercase), following the rule for titles where main words are capitalized but small words like 'of' or 'the' are not unless they start the title. Choice C represents missing capital on the title's first word, which occurs when students forget that titles follow specific capitalization rules; for example, charlotte's should be Charlotte's as the start of the title. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

2

Which sentence uses correct capitalization for a title with a name?

mrs. Chen helped me with my science project.

Mrs. Chen helped me with my science project.

Mrs. chen helped me with my science project.

Mrs. Chen helped me with my Science project.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, Mrs. Chen is a title with a name that needs capitalization, while science is a school subject that should not be capitalized. Choice C is correct because it capitalizes Mrs. Chen (title with name) and keeps science lowercase (school subject, not a language). Choice D represents over-capitalizing school subjects, which occurs when students capitalize general subjects thinking they are like languages, such as 'Science' should be science unless it's a language like English. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

3

Which sentence correctly capitalizes a day of the week and a month?

School starts on Monday in September.

School starts on monday in September.

School starts On Monday in September.

School starts on Monday in september.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, Monday is a day of the week and September is a month, both of which are proper nouns that need capital letters. Choice C is correct because it capitalizes Monday (day of the week) and September (month), following the rule that days and months are always capitalized. Choice B represents missing capital on the month, which occurs when students forget that months need uppercase letters like days; for example, september should be September as it's a specific month name. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

4

Which sentence correctly keeps a direction lowercase?

We drove north to visit Keisha in Texas.

We drove North to visit keisha in Texas.

We drove North to visit Keisha in Texas.

We drove north to visit Keisha in texas.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, north is a direction that should not be capitalized unless it's a region name. Choice C is correct because it does NOT capitalize north (direction) and capitalizes Keisha (person's name) and Texas (state). Choice A represents over-capitalizing directions, which occurs when students capitalize directions thinking they are like places, such as 'North' should be north unless it's a region name. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

5

Which sentence correctly capitalizes a title with a name (Coach + name)?​

coach Martinez helped Maya practice after school.

coach martinez helped Maya practice after school.

Coach martinez helped Maya practice after school.

Coach Martinez helped Maya practice after school.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, Coach Martinez includes a title 'Coach' used with a name, which requires capitalization for both the title and the name, and Maya is also a person's name needing capitalization. Choice A is correct because it capitalizes Coach (title before name) and Martinez and Maya (people's names). Choice B represents missing capitals on titles with names, which occurs when students forget that titles like Coach are capitalized when used with a name, such as 'coach Martinez' should be 'Coach Martinez'. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

6

Which sentence correctly capitalizes a language and the pronoun I?

My brother and I speak Spanish at home.

My Brother and I speak Spanish at home.

My brother and i speak Spanish at home.

My brother and I speak spanish at home.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, I is the pronoun that always needs capitalization, and Spanish is a language that is capitalized as a proper noun. Choice C is correct because it capitalizes I (pronoun always capitalized) and Spanish (language), applying the rules for the special pronoun and languages. Choice B represents missing capital on the language, which occurs when students think languages are like general subjects and forget they are proper nouns; for example, spanish should be Spanish as it's a specific language name. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

7

Which sentence correctly capitalizes a specific place and a direction word?​

We drove north to the Mississippi River for a picnic.

We drove north to the mississippi river for a picnic.

We drove North to the mississippi River for a picnic.

We drove North to the Mississippi River for a picnic.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, 'north' is a direction (no capital) and 'Mississippi River' is a specific body of water (needs capitals). Directions like north, south, east, west are not capitalized unless they name a specific region (the South, the Northeast). Choice C is correct because it does NOT capitalize north (direction) and capitalizes Mississippi River (specific place name). Mississippi River is a specific body of water where both words are part of the official name, but north is just a direction and stays lowercase. Choice A represents over-capitalizing directions, which occurs when students think all directions should be capitalized. 'North' should be north (don't capitalize directions unless region name) - directions only get capitals when naming regions like 'the North' in Civil War context. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: over-capitalizing directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); not capitalizing specific place names.

8

Which sentence uses correct capitalization for a person's name and a place?

My friend Emma lives in Chicago, Illinois.

My friend emma lives in Chicago, Illinois.

My friend Emma lives in chicago, Illinois.

My friend Emma lives in Chicago, illinois.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, Emma is a person's name and Chicago, Illinois are places, which are proper nouns that need capitalization. Choice C is correct because it capitalizes Emma (person's name), Chicago (city), and Illinois (state) - all proper nouns are capitalized. Choice A represents missing capitals on names, which occurs when students forget that proper nouns need capitals, such as 'emma' should be Emma (capitalize names). To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence. Have students proofread their own writing specifically checking: Did I capitalize names? Days? Months? First word? Pronoun I?

9

Which sentence correctly avoids capitalizing a direction?​​

we drove north to the lake after lunch.

We drove North to the lake after lunch.

We drove north to the Lake after lunch.

We drove north to the lake after lunch.

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, north is a direction and lake is a common noun. Directions are not capitalized unless they're part of a region name (like 'the North'), and common nouns like 'lake' are not capitalized unless part of a specific name. Choice B is correct because it does NOT capitalize north (direction) or lake (common noun). North is just a direction here, not a region name, so it stays lowercase. Choice A represents over-capitalizing directions, which occurs when students capitalize all directions thinking they're important words. North should be north (don't capitalize directions unless region name). To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). Practice identifying proper nouns vs common nouns - proper nouns name specific people/places/things (capitalize), common nouns are general categories (lowercase). Teach memory trick: 'If it's the official NAME of someone/something specific, capitalize it.' Watch for: not capitalizing names of people ('emma' → Emma), places ('chicago' → Chicago), days ('monday' → Monday); over-capitalizing seasons ('Spring' → spring), directions ('We went North' → north unless region name); forgetting to capitalize I ('my friend and i' → I); not capitalizing first word of sentence.

10

Which sentence correctly capitalizes the first word of a direct quote?​

Keisha said, "We should start our project on Tuesday."

Keisha said, "We should start our project on tuesday."

Keisha said, "we should start our project on Tuesday."

Keisha said, "we should start our project on tuesday."

Explanation

This question tests CCSS.L.4.2.a: using correct capitalization. Students must know when to capitalize (proper nouns, first word of sentence, pronoun I) and when NOT to capitalize (common nouns, seasons, directions). Capitalization rules: (1) First word of every sentence, (2) Pronoun I (always), (3) People's names (Emma, Dr. Smith, Coach Rivera), (4) Places (cities: Chicago; states: Texas; countries: Mexico; landmarks: Grand Canyon; streets: Main Street), (5) Days of week and months (Monday, January), (6) Holidays (Thanksgiving, Halloween), (7) Titles of books/movies (Charlotte's Web, The Lion King - capitalize important words), (8) Languages (Spanish, English), (9) Nationalities (American, Chinese). DO NOT capitalize: seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), directions (north, south) unless region name (the South), general nouns (the city, a park - not specific names), school subjects (math, science) except languages (English). In this sentence, 'We' is the first word of the quoted sentence (needs capital) and 'Tuesday' is a day of the week (needs capital). When someone speaks in a story (direct quote), the first word of what they say gets a capital letter, just like starting a new sentence. Choice C is correct because it capitalizes We (first word of the quoted sentence) and Tuesday (day of week). The quoted words form a complete sentence, so 'We' needs a capital as the first word of that sentence, and Tuesday is a day of the week. Choice A represents missing capital on first word of quote, which occurs when students forget that quotes starting with complete sentences need capitals. 'we' should be We (capitalize first word of quoted sentence) - treat the quote like a new sentence that needs a capital at the beginning. To help students: Create capitalization anchor chart with categories - ALWAYS capitalize: (1) first word of sentence, (2) pronoun I, (3) names of people (Emma, Mrs. Smith), (4) places (Chicago, Texas, Grand Canyon), (5) days/months (Monday, January), (6) holidays (Thanksgiving), (7) titles of works (Charlotte's Web). DO NOT capitalize: (1) seasons (spring, summer, fall, winter), (2) directions (north, south) unless region/name, (3) general nouns (the city, a school), (4) family words with possessives (my mom, his dad). For quotes: If the quote is a complete sentence, capitalize its first word. Watch for: not capitalizing first word of quoted sentences; not capitalizing days of week.

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