Test your knowledge of English capitalization rules with this interactive quiz! Learn why the first word in every sentence must be capitalized, explore common mistakes, and practice with clear examples. Capitalization Quiz
Tag: Grammar
Capitalization Quiz 5 SP1
Test your knowledge of English capitalization rules with this interactive quiz! Learn why the first word in every sentence must be capitalized, explore common mistakes, and practice with clear examples. Capitalization Quiz
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Capitalization Quiz 4 SP1
Test your knowledge of English capitalization rules with this interactive quiz! Learn why the first word in every sentence must be capitalized, explore common mistakes, and practice with clear examples. Capitalization Quiz
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Capitalization Rules 9 SP1
✨ Common Mistakes and Quick Fixes: Sentence After an Abbreviation
Sometimes we use abbreviations in our writing. An abbreviation is a short way of writing a word or phrase, like a.m. for “in the morning” or p.m. for “in the evening.”
But here’s a common mistake: after an abbreviation that ends with a period (.), we might forget that the next word could be the start of a new sentence. If it is, the next word must begin with a capital letter.
❌ Mistake: Forgetting to Capitalize After an Abbreviation
If you continue writing without capitalizing, it looks like one long sentence, even though it should be two.
Example (Wrong):
- She arrived at 7 a.m. then left.
👉 This looks like one sentence, but “Then” should start a new sentence.
✅ Quick Fix: Capitalize the Next Sentence
Always check: if the word after the abbreviation begins a new sentence, capitalize it.
Example (Correct):
- She arrived at 7 a.m. Then she left.
🧾 More Examples
Wrong:
- He finished at 5 p.m. then went home.
- We met at 10 a.m. and had breakfast.
- The train leaves at 6 p.m. it arrives at 9 p.m.
Correct:
- He finished at 5 p.m. Then went home.
- We met at 10 a.m. And had breakfast.
- The train leaves at 6 p.m. It arrives at 9 p.m.
🧩 Practice Sentences
Try fixing these:
- wrong: She woke up at 6 a.m. went to school. fix: She woke up at 6 a.m. Went to school.
- wrong: The party starts at 8 p.m. everyone is invited. fix: The party starts at 8 p.m. Everyone is invited.
- wrong: We arrived at 11 a.m. stayed until 2 p.m. fix: We arrived at 11 a.m. Stayed until 2 p.m.
🔄 American vs. British English Differences
The capitalization rule is the same in both American and British English:
- Always capitalize the first word of a new sentence, even if it comes after an abbreviation.
The only difference is in the style of abbreviations:
- American English: uses a.m. / p.m. with periods.
- Example: 7 a.m., 5 p.m.
- British English: often uses am / pm without periods.
- Example: 7 am, 5 pm
Example:
- American English: She arrived at 7 a.m. Then she left.
- British English: She arrived at 7 am. Then she left.
👉 Notice that the abbreviation style changes, but the capitalization rule stays the same.
🎯 Summary
- After an abbreviation, check if a new sentence begins.
- If yes → capitalize the first word.
- American English uses a.m. / p.m. with periods.
- British English often uses am / pm without periods.
- Capitalization rules are the same in both styles.
Capitalization Quiz 10 SP1
Test your knowledge of English capitalization rules with this interactive quiz! Learn why the first word in every sentence must be capitalized, explore common mistakes, and practice with clear examples. Capitalization Quiz
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Capitalization Rules 10 SP1
✨ Common Mistakes and Quick Fixes: Sentence After an Abbreviation (Capitalization Rules)
Sometimes we use abbreviations in our writing. An abbreviation is a short way of writing a word or phrase, like a.m. for “in the morning” or p.m. for “in the evening.”
But here’s a common mistake: after an abbreviation that ends with a period (.), we might forget that the next word could be the start of a new sentence. If it is, the next word must begin with a capital letter.
❌ Mistake: Forgetting to Capitalize After an Abbreviation
If you continue writing without capitalizing, it looks like one long sentence, even though it should be two.
Example (Wrong):
- She arrived at 7 a.m. then left.
👉 This looks like one sentence, but “Then” should start a new sentence.
✅ Quick Fix: Capitalize the Next Sentence
Always check: if the word after the abbreviation begins a new sentence, capitalize it.
Example (Correct):
- She arrived at 7 a.m. Then she left.
🧾 More Examples
Wrong:
- He finished at 5 p.m. then went home.
- We met at 10 a.m. and had breakfast.
- The train leaves at 6 p.m. it arrives at 9 p.m.
Correct:
- He finished at 5 p.m. Then went home.
- We met at 10 a.m. And had breakfast.
- The train leaves at 6 p.m. It arrives at 9 p.m.
🧩 Practice Sentences
Try fixing these:
- wrong: She woke up at 6 a.m. went to school. fix: She woke up at 6 a.m. Went to school.
- wrong: The party starts at 8 p.m. everyone is invited. fix: The party starts at 8 p.m. Everyone is invited.
- wrong: We arrived at 11 a.m. stayed until 2 p.m. fix: We arrived at 11 a.m. Stayed until 2 p.m.
🔄 American vs. British English Differences
The capitalization rule is the same in both American and British English:
- Always capitalize the first word of a new sentence, even if it comes after an abbreviation.
The only difference is in the style of abbreviations:
- American English: uses a.m. / p.m. with periods.
- Example: 7 a.m., 5 p.m.
- British English: often uses am / pm without periods.
- Example: 7 am, 5 pm
Example:
- American English: She arrived at 7 a.m. Then she left.
- British English: She arrived at 7 am. Then she left.
👉 Notice that the abbreviation style changes, but the capitalization rule stays the same.
🎯 Summary
- After an abbreviation, check if a new sentence begins.
- If yes → capitalize the first word.
- American English uses a.m. / p.m. with periods.
- British English often uses am / pm without periods.
- Capitalization rules are the same in both styles.
Capitalization Quiz 9 SP1
Test your knowledge of English capitalization rules with this interactive quiz! Learn why the first word in every sentence must be capitalized, explore common mistakes, and practice with clear examples. Capitalization Quiz
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Capitalization Rules 8 SP1
✨ Common Mistakes and Quick Fixes: Starting with Lowercase
One of the most common mistakes in writing is starting a sentence with a lowercase letter. Every sentence should begin with a capital letter. This rule helps readers know when a new sentence starts. Capitalization Rules.
❌ Mistake: Starting with Lowercase
If you begin a sentence with a lowercase letter, it looks wrong and can confuse the reader.
Examples (Wrong):
- the story begins at dawn.
- once upon a time, there was a king.
- yesterday we went to the park.
- she likes to read books.
✅ Quick Fix: Start with a Capital Letter
Always capitalize the first word of every sentence.
Examples (Correct):
- The story begins at dawn.
- Once upon a time, there was a king.
- Yesterday we went to the park.
- She likes to read books.
🧩 More Examples to Practice
Try spotting the mistake and fixing it:
- wrong: my dog is very playful. fix: My dog is very playful.
- wrong: we are learning about space. fix: We are learning about space.
- wrong: tomorrow will be sunny. fix: Tomorrow will be sunny.
- wrong: he is my best friend. fix: He is my best friend.
🔄 American vs. British English Differences
The rule about capitalizing the first word of a sentence is the same in both American and British English.
The only differences are in spelling or word choice, not capitalization. For example:
- American English:
- Wrong: color is my favorite subject.
- Fix: Color is my favorite subject.
- British English:
- Wrong: colour is my favourite subject.
- Fix: Colour is my favourite subject.
👉 Notice that “color/favorite” (American) and “colour/favourite” (British) are spelled differently, but both must start with a capital letter.
🧪 Practice Sentences
Can you fix these?
- wrong: the sun sets in the west. fix: The sun sets in the west.
- wrong: english is fun to learn. fix: English is fun to learn.
- wrong: sri lanka is an island. fix: Sri Lanka is an island.
🎯 Summary
- Always start sentences with a capital letter.
- Lowercase beginnings are a common mistake.
- American and British English both follow this rule.
- Only spelling differences (color/colour, favorite/favourite) change, not capitalization.
Capitalization Quiz 7 SP1
Test your knowledge of English capitalization rules with this interactive quiz! Learn why the first word in every sentence must be capitalized, explore common mistakes, and practice with clear examples. Capitalization Quiz
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Capitalization Rules 7 SP1
✨ Capitalization Rules: Dialogue Tags
When we write dialogue (the exact words someone says), we use quotation marks (“ ” or ‘ ’). A dialogue tag is the part that tells us who is speaking and how they said it. For example: he said, she asked, they shouted.
But how do we know when to capitalize the words inside the quotation marks? Let’s learn the rules.
🟢 Rule 1: Tag + Quoted Sentence → Capitalize Inside the Quote
If the dialogue tag comes before the quotation, the first word inside the quotation marks must be capitalized. That’s because the quoted words are a complete sentence.
Examples:
- He asked, “Are you ready?”
- She said, “This is my favorite book.”
- Mom shouted, “Dinner is ready!”
- The teacher explained, “You must finish your homework.”
👉 Notice how the first word inside the quotation marks (Are, This, Dinner, You) is capitalized.
🟡 Rule 2: Quoted Sentence + Tag → The Quoted Sentence Already Begins with a Capital
If the quotation comes before the dialogue tag, the first word inside the quotation marks is already capitalized (because it’s the start of a sentence). The tag comes after the quotation, usually with a comma before it.
Examples:
- “We’ll start now,” she said.
- “I love reading,” he replied.
- “Can you help me?” asked the boy.
- “It’s raining,” said Dad.
👉 The quoted sentence begins with a capital letter (We’ll, I, Can, It’s) because it’s a full sentence.
🧩 More Examples to Practice
- Tag first: He whispered, “Be quiet.”
- Quote first: “Be quiet,” he whispered.
- Tag first: She asked, “Do you want ice cream?”
- Quote first: “Do you want ice cream?” she asked.
🔄 American vs. British English Differences
The capitalization rules for dialogue tags are the same in both American and British English. The difference is in the style of quotation marks and punctuation placement:
| Feature | American English | British English |
| Quotation marks | Usually double quotes (“ ”) | Usually single quotes (‘ ’) |
| Punctuation placement | Periods and commas go inside the quotation marks | Periods and commas often go outside the quotation marks |
| Capitalization | Same rules: capitalize the first word of the quoted sentence | Same rules |
Example:
- American English: He asked, “Are you ready?”
- British English: He asked, ‘Are you ready’?
- American English: “We’ll start now,” she said.
- British English: ‘We’ll start now’, she said.
👉 The capitalization is the same, but the quotation marks and punctuation placement differ.
🧪 Practice Sentences
Decide if the capitalization is correct:
- He said, “are you ready?”
- He said, “Are you ready?”
- “we’ll start now,” she said.
- “We’ll start now,” she said.
Answers:
- ❌ Wrong → should be “Are” capitalized.
- ✅ Correct.
- ❌ Wrong → should be “We’ll” capitalized.
- ✅ Correct.
🎯 Summary
- Tag + quoted sentence → capitalize inside the quote.
- Quoted sentence + tag → the quoted sentence already begins with a capital.
- American vs. British English → Same capitalization rules, but different quotation mark styles and punctuation placement.