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In the English titles of publications and works of art, capitalize all words except the following:
Note, however, that these exceptions are also capitalized when they immediately follow a period, colon or dash within a title, or when they are the first or last word in a title.
Words that are normally prepositions are capitalized when they help form another part of speech:
In short titles, capitalize words that would be capitalized in full titles:
Even if some words appear in all capital letters on the title page of a work, capitalize only initial letters in the title, except in specialized bibliographies that must reflect the original typography.
Titles of ancient manuscripts are capitalized, even if the titles were assigned in modern times:
The titles of sacred writings are capitalized:
In titles containing hyphenated compounds, always capitalize the first element. Capitalize the second element also if it is a proper noun or proper adjective, or if it is as important as the first element:
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