sourdough. It is made up of two words sour and dough. In the sentence it describes the bread.
Sourdough is a compound word. It can be an adjective but it isn't a compound adjective.
The sentence isn't written correctly to indentify any compound adjectives . It should be "She ordered a sourdough-ham sandwich." Sourdough-ham would be the compound adjective.
Sandwich antecedes it.
In addition to is the compound preposition in Trudy ordered a salad in addition to the pizza.
Yes, for example. I ordered a sandwich 40 minutes ago and it still hasnt been delievered. When a pizza comes faster than a sandwich, there are issues.
No, order may be a verb, or a noun, with several disparate meanings. The past participle, ordered, can be used as an adjective.
The town of Springfield ordered a dazzling monorail system.
The word 'upgrade' is both a compound noun and a compound verb; for example:Noun: We have ordered the upgrade for your computer.Verb: We will upgrade the rest of the department in next month's budget.
Blake would earn $492. This is calculated by multiplying the cost of the lunch special ($6) by the number of customers who ordered it (82).
The President of the United States (Barack Obama).
It was named after the Earl of Sandwich. He wanted to eat whilst playing card games, so ordered some meats served in between two slices of bread (so he didn't have to use a knife and fork to eat his meal and not be able to play cards at the same time).
The Earl of Sandwich didn't want to leave his game, so he ordered the staff to slice some meat and put it between two slices of bread so he could eat with one hand and still play cards. Thus, the sandwich was invented.
Hamburger is ground up beef taken from beef cattle raised for that purpose. The hamburger sandwich originated from the Earl of Sandwich who was gaming and did not wish to leave the tables, so he ordered a steward to cook up a bit of beef and slap it between to pieces of bread and bring it to him. Thus, was born the original hamburger sandwich. Shortened to-day to simply, a Hamburger.
Yes, "court-ordered" is hyphenated when used as an adjective before a noun. For example: The court-ordered injunction was effective immediately.