Capitalization
CapitalizationRules on Capitalization
Below are examples of when to use capitalization in specific scenarios.
Complete sentences
Capitalize the first word of a sentence.
- Example: The students did well on their assignments.
Quotes
If a quote can function as a complete sentence, capitalize the first word of the quote.
- Example: Professor Duncan said, "Reading literature is a great way to learn about other people and cultures."
If quoted material is not a complete sentence, do not capitalize the first word.
- Example: Professor Duncan said that students can “learn about other people and cultures” by reading literature.
A sentence with a mixed quotation incorporates the grammar of the quote into the rest of the sentence. This commonly occurs with the phrase said that. Do not capitalize the first word of a mixed quotation.
- Example: Professor Duncan said that “reading literature is a great way to learn about other people and cultures.”
Proper nouns
- Names: Jane Doe, Ludwig van Beethoven
- Organizations: United Way, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, Pasco-Hernando State College, Plant High School
- Countries: United States
- Cities and States: St. Louis, Missouri
- Geographic locations: the West, the East, Global North, Global South
- Geographic regions: Sun Belt, Rust Belt, the Great Plains
- Family relation used as part of name: Uncle Fred, Granny Sara, Tito Jorge
- Family relation used instead of name: Mother, Father, Uncle, Auntie, Grandpa
- Title used instead of name: Captain, Senator, Cardinal, Coach, Sensei
- Title used as part of name: Mother Theresa, Senator Smith, Captain Kirk, Coach John
- Honorifics used as part of name: Mister Jones, Miss Lisa, Lord Tennyson
- Names of pets: Fido
Days of the week and months of the year
- Days: Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday
- Months: January, February, March, April, May, June, July, August, September, October, November, December
Terms related to nationality, ethnicity, cultural heritage, language, and religion
- Nationalities: American
- Cultures: Hispanic, Latino, Cajun
- Languages: French, Cantonese
- Religions: Christianity, Buddhism, Judaism, Islam
- Religious affiliations: Christian, Jewish, Muslim
- Religious texts: Torah, Bible, Quran, Diamond Sutra, New Testament
- Cultural terms as adjectives: Chinese food, French wine
The names of vessels
- USS Enterprise
- Cutty Sark
- Challenger
Abbreviations
- Organizations: FBI, NATO
- Countries: USA, UK, UAE, ROK
- Eras: BC, AD, BCE, CE
- Time zones: 8:30 EST (Eastern Standard Time)
In MLA format, do not capitalize a.m. or p.m.
Salutations and closing remarks in correspondence
- Dear Mr. Jones,
- Dear Sir or Madam,
- To Whom It May Concern,
- Dear Hiring Committee:
- Sincerely,
- Yours truly,
- With love,
Academic or business titles
- Introduction to Adolescent Psychology
- Painting 101
- Department of English
- Senior Assistant Technician
Titles of art and media
MLA format uses title-style capitalization, where only certain words in a title are capitalized. When following title-style capitalization, capitalize the first word, the last word, and all primary words in a title, including words that come after hyphens in compound words.
Examples of the parts of speech that should be capitalized in title-style capitalization:
- Nouns: The Flower of Evil
- Pronouns: His and Her Circumstances
- Verbs: To Kill a Mockingbird
- Adjectives: The Good Place
- Adverbs: To Boldly Go
- Subordinating conjunctions: After, Although, As, As If, As Soon As, Because, Before, If, That, Unless, Until, When, Where, While
Do not capitalize the following elements of a title when following title-style capitalization unless the element is the first word of the title:
- Prepositions: against, as, between, in, of, to, according to
- Coordinating conjunctions (FANBOYS): for, and, nor, but, or, yet, so
- The word to in infinitives: How to Train Your Dragon
- Articles: a, an, the
- Example: Against All Odds
- Example: A First Memory
- Example: The Best Ways to Travel
Examples of different types of media that follow the rules for title-style capitalization:
- Books: Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets
- Short stories: “The Masque of the Red Death”
- Publications: The Atlantic
- Short published works: “How to Want Less”
- Websites: Neopets, YouTube
- Songs: “You’ve Got a Friend in Me”
- Albums: Abbey Road
- Television shows: Adventure Time
- Radio shows and podcasts: Welcome to Night Vale
- Apps: iMovie, Uber Eats
- Video games: The Last of Us
- Visual art: Lady with an Ermine
- Productions: Hamilton