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For my resume, I have a summary at the top that starts with "Dedicated individual with Master of Science in biomedical engineering." Should "biomedical engineering" be capitalized? Should "Master of Science" be capitalized?

(This is for a project, I'm not actually a biomedical engineer.)

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  • There are no express rules. There is no right or wrong here, so there is no "should / should not be capitalised." By 'capitalised', I assume you mean initial capitals - not all capitals? Personally I would suggest capitalising both phases or neither. In this case probably both - but primarily because you want them to stand out, rather than for any grammatical reasons.
    – TrevorD
    Commented Jun 24, 2013 at 22:36
  • Yes, I meant the first letters of them. I think I will do both, so that it looks better.
    – Daphdaph22
    Commented Jun 24, 2013 at 23:09
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    Related question: Should “Applied Cryptography” be capitalized? Is it a proper noun?
    – Gnawme
    Commented Jun 25, 2013 at 3:31

1 Answer 1

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Assuming you are talking about a Master's degree, it should be capitalized as a proper noun. Similarly, if the name of the course (and the title on your degree certificate) was 'Biomedical Engineering*, then capitalise it to show the fact. Small letters in the latter case might mean "Well, the course title was 'Capillary Valving' but I specialised in biomedical engineering."

And if you say "I am - a master of science!" you should probably add "Bwahahaha!"so that everyone knows that you are a mad scientist.

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