Butter bell is not a compound word.
Butterball is a compound word.
Peanut and butter--both of them are nouns. However, does peanut modify butter? There are nouns that are used as modifiers (door bell; bell of a door)Butter is churned cream--the fat of milk--or milk. Is peanut butter a churned milk or fat of milk with peanuts?The ingredient required to make peanut butter is just dry roasted peanuts. It does not require milk or milk fat. And so, peanut butter is not butter. Consequently, peanut does not modify (describe) butter in peanut butter. Thus, when combined, peanut and butter forms a new meaning; therefore, peanut butter is a compound word, an open compound word to be exact.
bell curve
Yes cowbell is a compound word. The words are cow and bell.
peanut butter Peanut is a compound word. pea + nut = peanut
A compound word that incorporates "horse," "fire," "butter," and "house" is "horsefirebutterhouse." However, this is not a standard compound word in English. Instead, you can think of individual compound words like "firehouse" (fire + house) or "butterfly" (butter + fly) as examples of how compounds work in the language.
The compound word for "bell" is "bellflower." A bellflower is a type of flowering plant known for its bell-shaped blossoms. Other examples include "doorbell" and "cowbell." Each of these combines "bell" with another word to create a new meaning.
Examples of compound words using the word 'butter' are:peanut butterbutterscotchbutterflybutternut squashbuttermilkbutter bricklebutter dishbuttercupbutter churnalmond butter
If it is a candy yes, but if you are referring to the metaphor no.
Yes, "home bell" is a compound word formed by two separate words: "home" and "bell." When used together, they convey a specific meaning, typically referring to a bell used at home, such as a doorbell. However, it is worth noting that "homebell" is not commonly recognized as a single, formal compound word in most dictionaries.
If it is a candy yes, but if you are referring to the metaphor no.
No. The word "of" is a preposition. The noun "butter" is the object of the preposition, and together they form a prepositional phrase.
Casino butter is simply a compound butter that is a mixture of unsalted butter and parsley, green onions, garlic, red bell pepper, hot sauce, white wine, lemon juice, salt & pepper.