Yep, since Capitalism is the name of an economic system, so it is a noun which is capitalized in a sentence.
When Walmart pursues opportunities in the market to make more money, that is considered capitalism. The ability for businesses and individuals to pursue profits, as long as it is legal, is an example of capitalism.
That is a good question. Considerable individual choice is one characteristic that both share. In a democratic society the citizen is encouraged to participate (or at least he should be encouraged) and Capitalism is free-ranging and multi-optional with opportunities you can create for yourself.Democracy and Capitalism are not either/or. But they are not the same thing either. Opportunities in democracy and opportunities in Capitalism should be encouraged in both if both are to succeed.
coz they both have an ism at the end of the word
Capitalism
The term "Happy Capitalism" was coined by Professor Arindam Chaudhuri; it means capitalism that espouses "Survival of the weakest" than one that espouses "Survival of the fittest". In other words, capitalism should focus on ensuring that the most disadvantaged sections of the society are provided the maximum resources to ensure that the inequalities that exist within the society are immediately reduced.
The word 'will' should be capitalized only when it is a person's name or the first word in a sentence. As a verb or common noun, it should not be capitalized.
Yes it should. Any word in a title should be capitalized. However, the only acception to this is if the words "a, an, or the" are in the title and are not the first word. Then they are not capitalized.
Yes, Sunday should always be capitalized.
The second word should not be capitalized
As an abbreviation it should be capitalized.
Yes, Greek should be capitalized.
Yes it should be capitalized.
Yes Capitalized
No it shouldn't be capitalized.
Yes it should be capitalized.
It is not typically capitalized.
No it shouldn't be capitalized.