Road trip is two words. It means a journey via automobile, sometimes unplanned or impromptu.
Road trip is the right way to write this. So two words is the answer you are looking for.
An example sentence is: We went on a road trip last year.
Yes a field trip is a noun. The plural noun would be field trips.
That is the correct spelling of the term "round trip" (there and back). If it is used as an adjective, it should be hyphenated (e.g. round-trip ticket) because otherwise it could be read as two separate adjectives.
It is commonly used as two words. When I tried it as one word, both my spell check and the spell check in the top right corner of this answer box marked it as misspelled.
It is two words. Writing it as one is acceptable in the UK and is referred to as a "Britishism." But in American grammar, it is always two separate words.
The correct spelling is two separate words "field trip" (an organized outing).
R&B Rebels is the name of the Swedish group that two guys and one girl raps on a road trip in a RV.
'Field trip' is two words, not one.
The one way road distance is 2,764 miles and times two equals 5.528 miles.
Yes a field trip is a noun. The plural noun would be field trips.
Bus station is two words. My mother took me to the Greyhound bus station for my trip to Arizona.
Sal took a road trip to Idaho with her grandparents.
Answer:A compound word. Answer:It is both. Rail and road are two different words that were put together to form one word. A compound word is when two words are put together to form a one word.
A road trip from Melbourne's CBD to Apollo Bay is a distance of 190km. Such a road trip covers some of the state's prettiest countryside. Because of the winding Great Ocean Road, a traveller would need to allow at least two and a half hours for the journey.
IN the book walk two moons, they are going to Lewiston, ID.
217 kilometers (135 miles). It is a two-hour trip by road.
That is the correct spelling of the term "round trip" (there and back). If it is used as an adjective, it should be hyphenated (e.g. round-trip ticket) because otherwise it could be read as two separate adjectives.
The anagram is two words: road map.