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English Grammar OLD draft

3. Capital letters

  • Introduction

  • 1. Singular and plural
  • 2. Articles
  • 3. Capital letters
  • 4. Possessive
  • 5. Present simple, third person
  • 6. Present continuous
  • 7. Personal pronouns as objects
  • 8. Can, could and be able to
  • 9. Must and have to
  • 10. Dummy subject
  • Introduction

  • 1. Singular and plural

  • 2. Articles

  • 3. Capital letters

  • 4. Possessive

  • 5. Present simple, third person

  • 6. Present continuous

  • 7. Personal pronouns as objects

  • 8. Can, could and be able to

  • 9. Must and have to

  • 10. Dummy subject

3. Capital letters

In English, proper names (Nancy Drew, New York, Downing Street) get capitalised, most other nouns don’t. The names of the months and the days of the week get initial capital letters:

Monday, February

Names of holidays also get capitalised:

Easter, Independence Day

Note! The first person singular pronoun I is always written with a capital letter, regardless of where it appears in a sentence.

Learn English
Beginning 4. Possessive
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