yes
Because its a name and you capitilize every ones name.
"Dear Sir," is all you need to use.
by dear skin and other animals
My family and I is correct before a verb. (nominative case) My family and me is correct after a verb or preposition. (objective case) When deciding on whether to use "I" or "me" in a sentence, you take out the other person(s) and see what would be used. For example, if you were to say "My family and I went to dinner," you take out family and it would read "I went to dinner." "Me went to dinner" doesn't sound right. However, if you were to say "John wanted to go to dinner with my family and I," and take out family, you would be saying "John wanted to go to dinner with I." "I" does not fit here and is grammatically incorrect. The sentence should read "John wants to go to dinner with my family and me." You can do this with any personal pronoun such as we/us, he/him, she/her, or they/them. "She and I went to town." = She went to town. OR I went to town.
gherd
No, you do not need to capitalize "dear" in a cover letter. In a salutation, it is customary to capitalize the first word and any proper nouns, but "dear" is not typically considered a proper noun. So, you would write "Dear Hiring Manager" or "Dear Ms. Smith" with a capital letter for the first word and any proper nouns, but just "dear" on its own should be lowercase.
You would normally capitalize nouns in the salutation, Dear Residents: (but this is not a significant aspect of the letter and is often ignored). If you use a longer salutation, such as "My dear Neighbors," the word dear would not be capitalized.
It depends on how you want to use the word.If you wanted to say Dear friends it's A chairdeif you wanted to say Dear John it would be Sheáin, a chara
"Mama" should be capitalized when it is used as a proper noun or as a title before a name, for example "Mama Jane." If it is used more generally to refer to one's mother, it does not need to be capitalized, for example "my mama."
Dear Genevieve - 2009 Tom and Angelica's Living Room was released on: USA: 1 January 2011
Hopefully many sad farewell cards from dear friends and family
Greetings John Doe or Greetings and Salutations Mr. Doe.
When he found the "Dear John" letter and the closet empty, he made the assumption his girl friend had left him.
You would capitalize that word however you use it.
In Australia, you have two options to choose from in a general correspondence: 1) if you know the name of the recipient (for example, Mr John Smith), use: Dear Mr Smith ... Yours sincerely 2) if you do not know the name of the recipient, or if you want to use an impersonal approach, use: Dear Sir ... Yours faithfully Dear Madam ... Yours faithfully
Yes, always capitalize a state.
my ancestor came for mexico. I am John Lee and the person forgot to capitalize my's m and mexico's m and also I think for is suppose to be from.