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About Title Case Styles
Title case is a style of capitalization where the first letter of each major word in a title is capitalized.
Standard Style
Capitalizes the first letter of each major word, while articles (a, an, the), conjunctions (and, but, for), and prepositions shorter than five letters (in, on, with) are lowercase unless they're the first or last word.
Example: "Scientists Discover New Species in the Amazon Rainforest"
AP Style
Associated Press style capitalizes all words with four or more letters. Also capitalizes nouns, pronouns, verbs, adjectives, and adverbs regardless of length.
Example: "Scientists Discover New Species in the Amazon Rainforest"
Chicago Style
Chicago Manual of Style capitalizes the first and last words, and all other major words. It does not capitalize articles, prepositions (regardless of length), coordinating conjunctions, or the "to" in infinitives.
Example: "Scientists Discover New Species in the Amazon Rainforest"
APA Style
American Psychological Association style capitalizes major words, including nouns, verbs, adjectives, adverbs, and pronouns, as well as words longer than four letters.
Example: "Scientists Discover New Species in the Amazon Rainforest"