Not precisely.
If you're preferring to the type of sport, or the type of ball itself, then no.
If a club name has the word in it, then yes. For example: Major League Baseball.
No, except at the beginning of a sentence because it is
n
ot a proper
n
ou
n.
Capitalize the first letter of "Yours." Do not capitalize the "truly."
You capitalize the first letter of the name of each book. If you write "First Samuel," for example, instead of "1 Samuel" or I Samuel, then you also capitalize the F of "First."
Yes. You always capitalize the first word of a title or subtitle.
C is incorrect. You do capitalize the first word of every sentence, and each of the seasons is a proper noun. Each of the months is a proper noun, too, but not the days. For example, you would not capitalize "fifth" in, "August fifth" or "first" in "the first of February."
That ball is used by the first baseman to warm up the infield before the next inning. Instead of the first baseman hunting down a ball in the dugout to take out and warm up the infield he is thrown one as he runs off the field. It stays in his glove and he will have it when it is time to go back on the field and play defense.
second baseman
Lou played first baseman
Ray Miller - first baseman - was born in 1888.
Ray Miller - first baseman - died in 1927.
Mike Campbell - first baseman - was born in 1850.
Bill Phillips - first baseman - was born in 1857-04.
no.Unless the first baseman is touching first base.
George Burns - first baseman - died on 1978-01-07.
Jack Burns - first baseman - was born on 1907-08-31.
George Burns - first baseman - was born on 1893-01-31.
Jack Burns - first baseman - died on 1975-04-18.
In 1963, Joe Pepitone was the starting first baseman for the Yankees.