Let's have a blast with a KS2 English quiz all about capital letters! Capital letters are like the superheroes of sentences – they start every sentence and shine on proper nouns, like names of people or places.
When reading, capital letters show us where sentences begin. Proper nouns, like Charles Dickens or London, stay capitalised even in the middle of a sentence. But remember, most words don't need capitals, except at the start. Nail the capital game in this quiz and become a capital letter champion!
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'I' and 'It' are capitalised because they each begin a sentence.
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'He' is capitalised twice because it begins each sentence.
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'A' is capitalised because it begins the sentence. 'Scotland' is capitalised because it is a proper noun.
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'A' and 'I' both begin sentences.
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'They' is capitalised because it begins the sentence; 'Berlin' has a capital letter because it is a proper noun.
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'What' and 'Is' both begin sentences here.
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'She' and 'Imagine' are capitalised because they both begin sentences.
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'They' and 'After' are capitalised because they begin sentences. 'Newcastle' has a capital letter because it is a proper noun (but 'cousins' is not).
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'Do' and 'He' begin sentences. 'John' is a proper noun.
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Remember that all names are capitalised, even if you have as many names as the writer, Joseph Hilaire Pierre Rene Belloc!
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