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- Compound nouns formed from verb+preposition? - WordReference Forums
One of the most common, and for me, confusing errors on the Internet is using the compound noun as if it were a verb It drives me nuts, because I come from an era that strongly conditioned my mind to pronounce them differently, as we still do while so many seem to fail to associate this with the written forms
- Compound (buildings) - WordReference Forums
The Kennedy Compound consists of three houses on six acres (24,000 m²) of waterfront property on Cape Cod along Nantucket Sound in Hyannis Port, Massachusetts, United States It was once the home of American businessman and political figure Joseph P Kennedy, his wife Rose, and two of their sons, President John F Kennedy and Senator Robert F
- mini or mini- [hyphen?] | WordReference Forums
Hi everyone, I have a question regarding the use of "mini" How can one determine if "mini" should be used as a prefix in a compound (and thus require a hyphen) or if it should rather be considered a prenominal adjective, in which case both words ("mini" and the noun it modifies) would stand as
- Commonly-used [with or without hyphen] hyphenation -ly suffix
Hi, I would like to know which of the two is correct: "a commonly-used word object" or "a commonly used word object"? I know that you usually use the hyphen for adjs before nouns (as in commonly-held), but if I search Google I find lots of non-hyphenated results Thanks for you help [[ There
- Toolbox or Tool box? - WordReference Forums
Which one is correct and why? Wordreference shows "tool box", however, I've seen it also written as one noun "toolbox" When do we write compound nouns together (snowstorm) and when do we write them apart (high school) ?
- combinated VS combined - WordReference Forums
I've never used combinated in my entire life: I didn't even know it was a word Use combined and only that, if that's what you mean
- Composed of by - WordReference Forums
In this example "formed by" wouldn't be the entirely correct Now, if one were describing the construction of one of the generators, and stated that the generator unit is "formed by connecting a water turbine with an electrical generator", I wouldn't see that as being incorrect but still a bit awkward
- fairy tale or fairytale? | WordReference Forums
Please, I need to know if the correct spelling for "fairy tale" is "fairy tale" or "fairytale" Are the two options correct? Thanks, Elisangela
- English speaking English-speaking country - WordReference Forums
C S Hy, you have the sequence wrong, it is 2 words, hyphenated word, compound word However, that does not apply here The convention is to always hyphenate compound adjectives before the noun and not hyphenate following the noun They don't become single words This is an English-speaking country This country is English speaking
- lifestyle or life style? - WordReference Forums
Hello, Is there a chance we could write the parts of the compound noun lifestyle separately -- life style -- in the same meaning: a set of attitudes, habits, or possessions associated with a particular person or group as defined by Wordreference? If yes, in which situations? I remember seeing
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