Sentence Case Text Generator
Convert text to sentence case with only the first letter of sentences capitalized. Clean and readable format.
Try it now
About Sentence Case Style
Convert text to sentence case with only the first letter of sentences capitalized. Clean and readable format.
How to use Sentence Case text
- 1 Type your text in the generator above
- 2 Click the "Copy" button to copy the Sentence Case styled text
- 3 Paste it anywhere you want - social media, usernames, messages
- 4 Enjoy your stylish Sentence Case text!
Copy examples
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Sentence Case?
Sentence Case capitalizes only the first letter of the first word: 'The quick brown fox jumps' with subsequent words lowercase (except proper nouns). It's how normal sentences are written—the most natural, readable capitalization style for body text and casual content.
When should Sentence Case be used instead of Title Case?
Sentence Case suits: body text and paragraphs, casual headlines and subheadings, conversational tone content, UI labels and buttons (modern preference), and anything prioritizing readability over formality. Many modern style guides (Google, Apple) prefer sentence case for interface text because it's easier to scan.
Why is Sentence Case becoming more popular for headlines?
Digital content trends toward conversational tone—sentence case feels friendlier and more approachable than formal title case. Tech companies (Google, Microsoft) adopted sentence case for UI, influencing web design broadly. It reduces cognitive load (easier to read) and feels less 'shouty' than title case. The shift reflects casual digital communication norms.
How does Sentence Case handle proper nouns?
Proper nouns (names, places, brands) remain capitalized in sentence case: 'The meeting is in New York with John' not 'the meeting is in new york with john.' Sentence case applies to common words; proper nouns follow their own capitalization rules regardless of position in sentence.
What's the accessibility case for Sentence Case?
Sentence case is generally more accessible: easier to read for people with dyslexia (word shapes are more distinct), less cognitive effort to process, more natural for screen readers (title case can cause awkward emphasis), and clearer for non-native English speakers. When accessibility matters, sentence case is often preferred.