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It may be spelled coordinator or co-ordinator.Coordinator is more common in use.
The word "in-depth" is correctly spelled with a hyphen when used as an adjective, to mean through or detailed (e.g. an in-depth analysis).In its adverb use, it remains a two-word prepositional phrase, "in depth."
i can enunciate correctly
The dog buried its bone in the yard.
A hyphen (-) is used to join or combine words or numbers together or to separate syllables. Ex: We have to study African-Americans this year! (joining words) We have ninety-three people in band. (joining numbers) ve-he-ment (separating syllables)
Yes it's correct.
Yes, the hyphen goes in the word "dead-end" because the two words together have a different meaning than separately.
No, excitingly is one word so you would not use a hyphen in it.
Email is correct. Some people still use e-mail, with a hyphen, but email without a hyphen is used much more often.
You do not use a hyphen when writing square feet. Using a hyphen would make it one word which should not be the case.
how to use we student in a sentence
"He answered the difficult question correctly."
What a hyphen does is it is showing you what you are saying in the sentence; it represents something. It is NOT to be used as a pause. Commas and semicolon's are used for that. For example, if I wanted to say something about a car, I would say "This car is very nice - it has leather seats." The hyphen is a place holder if you do not want to end a sentence because you are describing what you are talking about in the first part of the sentence.
It may be spelled coordinator or co-ordinator.Coordinator is more common in use.
Stepmother is one word. So, you do not have to use a hyphen. Similarly: stepfather, stepsister, etc.
I would use it correctly in a sentence, of course. Thank you for asking.
A dash is used to connect two phrases; a hyphen is used to connect two words. Here are some examples. I use a hyphen for the compound word anti-matter. I use a dash to create a break in the flow of my sentence -- if you know what I mean.