The only town in the US with two hyphens in its name is Mammoth Lakes, California.
Hyphens are used to link words together to form compound words, such as "well-being" or "mother-in-law." They can also be used to separate syllables in words that are broken at the end of a line in writing. Additionally, hyphens are used in some prefixes, suffixes, and to avoid ambiguity or confusion in writing.
No, apostrophes and hyphens serve specific functions in writing. Apostrophes are used to indicate possession or contraction, while hyphens are used to join words or to clarify the meaning of a word or phrase. Both punctuation marks are important for clarity and proper grammar.
Yes, an apostrophe is used in "year's" to show possession or the passage of time. For example, "last year's report" or "one year's worth of experience."
"Last year" refers to the immediately preceding year, while "past year" can refer to any previous year. Use "last year" when referring to the most recent completed year, and "past year" when referring to any year prior to the current one.
Hyphens not needed
If you're using the phrase as an adjective (example "I hate the end-of-the-year audit!") then it will definitely need the hyphens. Otherwise, the hyphens are incorrect.
no hyphens - 57 years old is what you are.
Yes it should.
Most people would spell it sixteen-year-old child. But over the last 20 years, people are ignoring the hyphens.
Yes it should be hyphenated.
Yes, when used as an adjective. Year-to-year is hyphenated when used as an adjective: year-to-year comparison, year-to-year budget. Year to year is not hyphenated when it is used as a time period: We come back to this same beach year to year.
If you're using the phrase as an adjective (example "This easy-to-use remote is great!") then it will definitely need the hyphens. Otherwise, the hyphens are incorrect.
It's unneccesary, but you can say 7-year-old boy to make it one word. Just hyphenate any place where you would normally see a space.
No it doesn't need to be hyphenated.
There is no need to hyphenate this expression.
not too distant future