Can someone answer I would like to know too.... Ie Mary-Jane or Jai-Lynn
No, "sign off" is not hyphenated when used as a verb. However, it can be hyphenated when used as a noun (e.g., "She gave her sign-off on the project").
There are not really many animals with a hyphenated name. A few animals with the hyphenated names are the prairie-dog, jack-rabbit, and the ground-squirrel.
In APA format, hyphenated names should be treated as one unit with no spaces. For in-text citations, use the full hyphenated name (e.g., Smith-Jones) each time the author is cited. In the reference list, list the hyphenated name as you would a single last name (e.g., Smith-Jones, A.).
Hyphenated things cannot be separated. The two go together.
Yes a person can use a hyphenated surname (last name) which would be the woman's maiden name hyphenated with her married name. Example: Jane Doe-Smith. Often famous people or people known by their surname in a business they are running will keep their family name hyphenated with whomever they marry, but keep both the maiden surname and married surname is becoming more common practice. In ways keeping both names comes in handy if one is into genealogy.
a connected word ( or a hyphenated word)
Yes they are.
It is not hyphenated.
Antisemitism. Sometimes it is hyphenated.
Motorcycle is not hyphenated
No it's not hyphenated.
words are only hyphenated when they have a separate meaning when separated than they do when hyphenated