Look at these examples to see how capital letters and apostrophes are used.
India celebrates Independence Day on 15 August.
Adam speaks English, Arabic and some Persian.
It's really cold today! They say it'll snow tonight.
Jane's staying at her parents' house this week.
Try this exercise to test your grammar.
- Grammar test 1
Grammar explanation
Capitalisation
There are lots of times when you need to use capital letters – for example, to start a sentence or for the pronoun I. Here are some other important rules for using them.
Days, months and holidays
We capitalise days of the week, months and festivals, but not seasons.
His birthday party is on Thursday.
Schools are closed at Christmas.
It rains a lot in April and May, but the summer is very dry.
Names of people and places
We capitalise the names of people and places, including streets, planets, continents and countries.
Bea Jankowski has lived on Church Street in Manchester for 20 years.
The Earth is the third planet from the Sun.
Russia is in both Europe and Asia.
Words that come from the names of places – for example languages, nationalities and adjectives that refer to people or things from a country, region or city – are capitalised. We also capitalise nouns and adjectives that come from the names of religions.
Some Canadians speak French.
Londoners eat a lot of Indian food.
Most Muslims fast during the day for Ramadan.
Titles and names of institutions
The names of organisations and usually the important words in book and film titles are capitalised. When a person's job title goes before their name, capitalise both. If the title is separate from their name, capitalise only their name.
Salome Zourabichvili, the president of Georgia, is visiting President Alvi tomorrow.
The chief executive officer lives in New York.
We are reading War and Peace with Ms Ioana, our teacher.
Apostrophes
We use an apostrophe to show a contraction or possession.
Contractions
We use an apostrophe to show where there are missing letters in contractions.
It's raining. (It's = It is)
Don't worry, it won't rain. (Don't = Do not; won't = will not)
She can't drive because she's broken her leg. (can't = cannot; she's = she has)
I'd like a coffee, please. (I'd = I would)
You'll be fine. (You'll = You will)
** Note that it's is a contraction of it is or it has. its is a possessive form of the pronoun it.
The dog is chasing its tail.
Are you sure it's OK for me to ring you so early?
It's rained a lot this week.
Possession
We also use an apostrophe with the letter s after a noun (normally a person, animal or group) to show that the noun owns someone or something.
My cat's favourite toy is a small, red ball.
Sadiq's parents live in Liverpool.
South Korea's economy is growing.
Singular or plural
We use 's when the possessor is singular.
Marie's mother is going to Hong Kong.
We also use 's when the possessor is a plural noun that does not end in s.
The People's Republic of China
My cousin writes children's books.
When a plural noun ends in s, we put the apostrophe after the s (s').
This is a picture of my parents' house.
Our friend's new car is red. She just got it yesterday.
Our friends' new car is red. They just got it yesterday.
When a singular noun ends in s, we generally use 's.
James's brother-in-law is German.
He has a collection of Dickens's novels.
Do this exercise to test your grammar again.
- Grammar test 2
Hi,
I believe there is an error in the sentence " I'd like a coffee, please. (I'd = I would) " that you wrote for "Contractions".
In the lesson "https://learnenglish.britishcouncil.org/grammar/a1-a2-grammar/nouns-countable-uncountable" you say that "coffee" is an "Uncountable noun", so you have to use "some" or " any" while in this lesson you say "I'd like a coffee, please".
May I know why it is considered "Countable noun"?
THANKS
Hi Ama1,
Actually, "coffee" is both uncountable and countable. As an uncountable noun, it means the substance of coffee, or coffee in general. As an countable noun, it means a unit of coffee (i.e., a cup of coffee).
The same is true for other uncountable nouns for drinks. You can say "a water / a tea / a juice" (etc.) to mean a cup or a unit of those drinks.
Jonathan
LearnEnglish team
💯 percent success
Good lesson, 100%.
How to use the ; mark?
Hello Mahaj,
There are two mains uses of the semicolon. One is to join two independent clauses without using a subordinating conjunction (such as 'and'). For example, we could rewrite 'Jo had an apple and she gave half of it to Dan' as 'Jo had an apple; she gave half of it to Dan'. We could also write 'Jo had an apple. She gave half of it to Dan.' It's quite unusual to use a semicolon in informal or even neutral writing. We usually use a full stop or a conjunction instead.
The other use of a semicolon is to separate items in a list when the items are multiple words.
Hope this helps. There are lots of useful resources online if you do a search for 'how to use a semicolon'.
Best wishes,
Kirk
LearnEnglish team
Hi there,
I'm writing a paper for a national exam here in Spain, and have to be very precise regarding grammar, punctuation, etc., as you may understand.
I have one question about capital letters, with which I'm a little bit confused:
I've seen articles where it mentions for example, "UK government", be it "government" in lower case. However, I've also read somewhere else where it reads something like "Welsh Government", with capital G.
I heard something that when you're specifying about a place or its name you must use capitals. But in the first case, "government" is written in lower case, which is confusing me...
I can see that there's something about it on "Titles and names of institutions", but If I'm not wrong, it doesn't say anything that clarifies my issue in there.
Could you please throw some light onto it for me? Thanks in advance!
Hi The_Eager_Eagle,
I'm afraid I don't have much light to throw! This is an area of usage where there is a lot of variation. A single system of spelling that is universally agreed may not exist.
I agree with your observations that it's common to write "UK government" (small g) and "Welsh Government" (big G). However, this seems to be a convention, not a fixed rule. I had a quick look at the UK government's own website and I found that they mostly used "UK government" but I saw a few uses of "UK Government" too. I noticed that some style guides for writing recommend always using "government" with a small g. But the government of Hong Kong (for example) tends to write "Hong Kong Government".
As for what to do for your national exam, I can't really say what you should write, given the inconsistency in spelling. But perhaps you can look at some past papers or official materials to see how they are spelling "government".
Jonathan
LearnEnglish team
lol i can't do this test quickly bc some time i confuse about name of people or name of month which is needed to written capitalize letter
Hello. Could you please help me as I'm really confused? Are all the three sentences correct? Why? Please explain more about all possibilities of this rule?
1- We've booked a three weeks' holiday.
2- We've booked a three weeks holiday.
3- We've booked a three-week holiday.
Thank you.