![]() ![]() Your quest for success begins at Liverpool Metropolitan Cathedral, and you’ll pass Anfield and Aintree, the Georgian Quarter and the University of Liverpool as you proceed. As well as its reputation for incredible music, Liverpool is a hub of history, industry and innovation - and you can own everything from Penny Lane to the Liverpool School of Tropical Medicine if the dice falls your way. Apply the same rules to similar terms such as parish.Step into the home of the legendary rock band The Beatles in this special Liverpool edition of MONOPOLY. Lowercase plural combinations: Westchester and Rockland counties. Avoid county of phrases where possible, but when necessary, always lowercase: the county of Westchester. Lowercase when it is not part of the formal title: county Health Commissioner Frank Jones. Capitalize as part of a formal title before a name: County Manager John Smith. Lowercase the commission, the legislature, etc. Capitalize county if it is an integral part of a specific body's name even without the proper noun: the County Commission, the County Legislature. Lowercase the board, the department, etc. Retain capitalization for the name of a county body if the proper noun is not needed in the context lowercase the word county if it is used to distinguish an agency from state or federal counterparts: the Board of Supervisors, the county Board of Supervisors the Department of Social Services, the county Department of Social Services. Capitalize the full names of county governmental units: the Dade County Commission, the Orange County Department of Social Services, the Suffolk County Legislature. ![]() 9.Ĭapitalize when an integral part of a proper name: Dade County, Nassau County, Suffolk County. ![]() ![]() EXAMPLES: Dvorak's "New World Symphony." Dvorak's Symphony No. Janacek's "From the House of the Dead," not Janacek's "Z Mrtveho Domu." - For other classical music titles, use quotation marks around the composition's nicknames but not compositions identified by its sequence. "Die Walkuere" and "Goetterdaemmerung" from Wagner's "Der Ring des Nibelungen" if sung in German but "The Valkyrie" and "The Twilight of the Gods" from "The Ring of the Nibelung" if sung in English. Mozart's "The Magic Flute" if sung in English but "Die Zauberfloete" if sung in German. FOREIGN WORKS: Rousseau's "War," not Rousseau's "La Guerre." But: Leonardo da Vinci's "Mona Lisa." Mozart's "The Marriage of Figaro" if sung in English but "Le Nozze di Figaro" if sung in Italian. REFERENCE WORKS: IHS Jane's All the World's Aircraft Encyclopaedia Britannica Webster's New World College Dictionary, Fifth Edition. EXAMPLES: "The Star-Spangled Banner," "The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich," "Gone With the Wind," "Of Mice and Men," "For Whom the Bell Tolls," "Time After Time," the "Today" show, the "CBS Evening News," "This Is Us," "A Star Is Born," "Star Wars," "Game of Thrones." See television program titles for further guidelines and examples. However, musical compositions in Slavic languages are always referred to in their English translations. In those instances, generally refer to the work in the language it was sung in, so as to differentiate for the reader. An exception to this is reviews of musical performances. Translate a foreign title into English unless a work is generally known by its foreign name. Do not use quotation marks for sculptures: The Thinker, Michelangelo's Pieta. Do not use quotation marks around such software titles as WordPerfect or Windows apps or around names of video, online or analog versions of games: FarmVille, Pokemon Go, The Legend of Zelda, Monopoly. In addition to catalogs, this category includes almanacs, directories, dictionaries, encyclopedias, gazetteers, handbooks and similar publications. More detail: - Capitalize prepositions of four or more letters (above, after, down, inside, over, with, etc.) and conjunctions of four or more letters (because, while, since, though, etc.) - Capitalize both parts of a phrasal verb: "What To Look For in a Mate" "Turn Off the Lights in Silence." But: "A Life of Eating Chocolate for Stamina" "Living With Both Feet off the Ground." (Note the different uses of for and off, and thus the different capitalization, in those examples.) - Capitalize to in infinitives: "What I Want To Be When I Grow Up." Also: - Put quotation marks around the names of all such works except the Bible, the Quran and other holy books, and books that are primarily catalogs of reference material. Apply these guidelines to the titles of books, movies, plays, poems, albums, songs, operas, radio and television programs, lectures, speeches, and works of art: - Capitalize all words in a title except articles (a, an, the) prepositions of three or fewer letters (for, of, on, up, etc.) and conjunctions of three or fewer letters (and, but, for, nor, or, so, yet, etc.) unless any of those start or end the title. ![]()
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