Most people would spell it sixteen-year-old child. But over the last 20 years, people are ignoring the hyphens.
Hyphens not needed
The number 416 is "four hundred sixteen" or "four hundred and sixteen."(for the year or a street address, it could be spoken four sixteen)
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.
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.
The hardest word to spell for an 8 years old is Czechoslovakia.
Hyphens not needed
The number 416 is "four hundred sixteen" or "four hundred and sixteen."(for the year or a street address, it could be spoken four sixteen)
No, a sixteen year old can not legally move out on their own in Kentucky. Unless the sixteen year old is married or has parental permission they have to live with the parent until they are 18.
no hyphens - 57 years old is what you are.
Yes it should.
No. Pregnancy does not confer emancipation.
ALL rights. You're still a child.
yes you may but you will be subpeoning there parents since the child is the child is there responsability
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.
The number is "one thousand six hundred ninety-three."The year would be "sixteen ninety-three."
both
sole custody