Yes, butterfly is a solid/closed compound word.
Solid/Closed Compounds are formed when two or more words are put together and do not need to be separated.
Ex: mailbox, sunshine, bookmark, shoelace
Some examples of solid compound words are: butterfly, notebook, bedroom, and rainbow.
Yes, butterfly's is a singular, common, concrete, compound, possessive noun; a word for a thing.The apostrophe 's' added to the noun indicates that something belongs to the butterfly, such a the butterfly's wing or the butterfly's flight.
PROBABLY walk
One example of a compound word that ends in "cry" is "butterfly."
Yes, a compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that form a word with a meaning of its own: butter+ fly = butterfly.
barfly butterfly dragonfly housefly flypaper flyover flyswatter
A compound word, as the word sudgest, is a combination of two words to make one i.e Butterfly, Watermelon, etc.
Yes. butter + fly = butterfly
No, a raindrop is not a compound word. It is a single word made up of the two separate words "rain" and "drop."
i think it s beehive
Storebook is not a compound word. Storybook is a compound word.
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.