Put the elements into the gaps
- start
- People like to eat fruit.
- "he", "she", "it"
- He asked how old I was
- nicknames of people
- "de", "du", "des", "di", "von"
- the Swiss, Otto von Bismarck
- squares or streets
- days of the week
- Halloween, Trafalgar Square
- drinks and food
- Scotch whiskey
- communities, committees
- National Olympic Committee
Capital Letters
There are many rules concerning writing capital letters in words, word combinations and sentences. Here is the list of the most common cases.
Capital letters are used when we [ ] the sentence.
Example:[ ]
Personal pronouns such as [ ], etc. are written in lowercase letters except for the pronoun "I".
Example:[ ].
When you use first names, surnames and [ ], they are also written with capital letters. Some surnames are also written with capital letters if there are such words as [ ] as a part of the surname. The same is about nations, nationalities, and national languages.
Example:[ ].
Geographical names such as the names of cities, towns, [ ] are marked with upper-case letters too. The same is about major historical events and epochs, names of the months, [ ], official holidays.
Example:[ ].
Some names of [ ] are also written in capital letters if they are in a singular form.
Example:[ ].
The names of organisations, [ ], political parties, works of art, newspapers, magazines and journals are used with capital letters.
Example: the [ ], The Times.