It depends.
'Mike and Mary's Pizza' is most likely a place, and a noun is a person, place, or thing. If it is a person's name, a place (such as a street name, name of a place, a city, a country, a town..) it must be capitalized. Just regular English rules.
Now, if the Mike and Mary HAD a pizza, you would not need to capitalize pizza considering it is the object. Here's an example of a sentence where you wouldn't need to capitalize pizza - "Mike and Mary's pizza was cheese." Now here's an example of where you would want to capitalize pizza - "I am headed to Mike and Mary's Pizza to get some food."
7.2 x 19.5 = 140.4
Answer: 140 meters squared
Hope my answer helps :)
The correct answer is C.
The daughter persuades him. He was first reluctant, but she convinces him at the end.
Answer:
The answer is B
Explanation:
"summer fields are mown"
"fledged and flown"
"dry leaves"
"aftermath"
"the fields we mow and gather"