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Generative AI assistance for any writing challenge Try It for Free ⟶ Grammarly Home * Why Grammarly * How It Works * Overview Robust, real-time communication assistance * Generative AI Write, rewrite, get ideas, and quickly reply with AI assistance * Writing Enhancements Features to polish, grammar, tone, clarity, team consistency, and more * Trust & Security You own your data * Demo Try Grammarly, and see how it works * Where It Works * Overview Writing assistance on 500,000+ apps and sites across your devices * Windows & Mac For desktop apps and websites like Word and Gmail * Browser Extension For sites like Google Docs, Gmail, and LinkedIn * Mobile For every Android and iOS app * Who We Are * About * Responsible AI * Press * Careers * We Stand with Ukraine Grammarly stands with our friends, colleagues, and family in Ukraine, and with all people in Ukraine. * For Work * * Individuals * Teams & Businesses * Success Stories * Business Events & Reports * For Education * * Students * Institutions * Education Events & Reports * Compare Plans * Tools & Guides * Tools * Demo Try Grammarly, and see how it works * Grammar Checker Check for grammar, spelling, and punctuation mistakes * Plagiarism Checker Check your work for plagiarism * Citation Generator Format citations in APA, MLA, and Chicago * AI Writing Tools Create cover letters, emails, and more with AI * Guides * Writing * Grammar * Punctuation * Blog Log in Get GrammarlyIt's free Grammarly Home * Why Grammarly * How It Works * Overview Robust, real-time communication assistance * Generative AI Write, rewrite, get ideas, and quickly reply with AI assistance * Writing Enhancements Features to polish, grammar, tone, clarity, team consistency, and more * Trust & Security You own your data * Demo Try Grammarly, and see how it works * Where It Works * Overview Writing assistance on 500,000+ apps and sites across your devices * Windows & Mac For desktop apps and websites like Word and Gmail * Browser Extension For sites like Google Docs, Gmail, and LinkedIn * Mobile For every Android and iOS app * Who We Are * About * Responsible AI * Press * Careers * We Stand with Ukraine Grammarly stands with our friends, colleagues, and family in Ukraine, and with all people in Ukraine. * For Work * * Individuals * Teams & Businesses * Success Stories * Business Events & Reports * For Education * * Students * Institutions * Education Events & Reports * Compare Plans * Tools & Guides * Tools * Demo Try Grammarly, and see how it works * Grammar Checker Check for grammar, spelling, and punctuation mistakes * Plagiarism Checker Check your work for plagiarism * Citation Generator Format citations in APA, MLA, and Chicago * AI Writing Tools Create cover letters, emails, and more with AI * Guides * Writing * Grammar * Punctuation * Blog Get GrammarlyIt's freeLog in Grammarly Blog Home * Writing * * Writing Tips * Grammar * Students * Professionals * Lifestyle * Product * Company Grammarly Blog Home * Writing * * Writing Tips * Grammar * Students * Professionals * Lifestyle * Product * Company Get GrammarlyIt's freeLog in CAPITALIZATION IN TITLES: RULES Grammarly Updated on April 25, 2023Grammar Knowing the right way to capitalize your title depends on which style guide you’re following. Major style guides—such as the AP Stylebook, The Chicago Manual of Style, and the AMA Manual of Style—have specific rules on title capitalization. (We reference two of the most common style guides, AP and Chicago, throughout this post.) According to most style guides, nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs are capitalized in titles of books, articles, and songs. You’d also capitalize the first word and (according to most guides) the last word of a title, regardless of what part of speech they are. A few parts of speech tend to be lowercase. For instance, articles (the, an, and a) are lowercase. Some conjunctions (e.g., but, yet) and prepositions (e.g., over, through) are capitalized, and sometimes some are lowercased—it depends on the style guide you follow. For instance, in AP style title case, prepositions of four letters or more are capitalized. But in Chicago-style title case, all prepositions are lowercase, no matter their length. (We explain this more below.) When in doubt, look up the rules of the style guide you’re choosing to follow to know exactly how to style a title. Our examples below can help orient you to capitalization rules across different style guides, so you can title your books, articles, essays, and more like a pro in no time. ARTICLES Let’s start with articles. All major style guides are aligned on articles, which agree that articles are lowercase in titles unless they’re one of the first and last words: Incorrect: Ernest Hemingway wrote For Whom The Bell Tolls. Correct: Ernest Hemingway wrote For Whom the Bell Tolls. Incorrect: Girl on A Train is a thriller by A. J. Waines. Correct: Girl on a Train is a thriller by A. J. Waines. In each of these titles, the and a are not capitalized because they are articles. In this next example, the first article, a, is capitalized because it’s the first word, but the is lowercase because it is an article that is not a first or last word: Incorrect: Jennifer Egan wrote A Visit from The Goon Squad. Correct: Jennifer Egan wrote A Visit from the Goon Squad. CONJUNCTIONS Next are conjunctions. Conjunctions are words that link other words, phrases, or clauses together. Style guides differ here on whether to capitalize or lowercase certain conjunctions. For instance, according to AP style, conjunctions of three letters or fewer are lowercase. However, Chicago style prefers to lowercase all coordinating conjunctions except for yet and so and lowercases the subordinating conjunction as but capitalizes if. (Again, it’s best to look up the rule if you’re unsure about your specific title.) The examples below illustrate both AP and Chicago rules for conjunctions: Incorrect: She titled her thesis “Urban Legends: Fact Or Fiction?” Correct: She titled her thesis “Urban Legends: Fact or Fiction?” Incorrect: Shakespeare wrote Romeo And Juliet. Correct: Shakespeare wrote Romeo and Juliet. NOUNS Style guides agree that nouns should always be capitalized. Incorrect: The lion, the witch and the wardrobe is by C. S. Lewis. Correct: The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe is by C. S. Lewis. VERBS Verbs are also always capitalized, according to all style guides. Incorrect: Things fall Apart is by Chinua Achebe. Correct: Things Fall Apart is by Chinua Achebe. ADJECTIVES Adjectives are always capitalized. Incorrect: Roald Dahl wrote Charlie and the chocolate Factory. Correct: Roald Dahl wrote Charlie and the Chocolate Factory. ADVERBS Adverbs are also always capitalized. Incorrect: Brené Brown wrote Daring greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead. Correct: Brené Brown wrote Daring Greatly: How the Courage to Be Vulnerable Transforms the Way We Live, Love, Parent, and Lead. PREPOSITIONS Knowing whether to capitalize prepositions also depends on what style guide you follow. In AP title case, prepositions of four or more letters (such as between, above, and below) should be capitalized. However, the Chicago Manual of Style says to lowercase all prepositions, regardless of their length. When following Chicago Style, watch out for how you’re using a preposition in a title—it might not necessarily function as a preposition. You can capitalize a preposition when it is “used adverbially or adjectivally (up in Look Up, down in Turn Down),” the Chicago Manual of Style says. So if you were writing the following title of this novella, you would write it this way, according to Chicago style: Norman Maclean wrote A River Runs through It. But if you were following AP style, you would write it this way: Norman Maclean wrote A River Runs Through It. MORE EXAMPLES OF CAPITALIZATION IN TITLES Consider these additional examples of correctly capitalized titles (which meet the criteria in any style guide) to help guide you: East of Eden was a popular book by John Steinbeck. The Ocean at the End of the Lane, by Neil Gaiman, is my favorite book. The first movie of the series is Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone. The sitcom Two and a Half Men explores the lives of two brothers. The same rule regarding title capitalization applies to subtitles. See the examples below: The Assassin’s Cloak: An Anthology of the World’s Greatest Diarists Virginia Woolf wrote Orlando: A Biography. In these particular examples, the articles “an” and “a” are capitalized because they are both the first word of the subtitle. Your writing, at its best. 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