Eye mark is a two separate word.
"eyemark" is typically one word, as it is a specialized term referring to a specific type of print-to-cut registration mark used in digital printing.
No, the Italian word "tre" ("three") should not have an accent mark.Specifically, the word only has three letters. Two of the letters are consonants. What with just one vowel, no accent is needed for pronunciation or stress.
Hipbone is one word.
"Hardworking" is one word.
"Foolproof" is one word.
"Doorway" is one word.
Well, first of all, it's eyewear, if it were one word. It is two words. Eye wear.
There are two syllables. Check and mark are one syllable each.
There are two vowels in the word 'eye'.
It depends on the context. In the context of "a teardrop came from her eye", it is one word. In the context of "he watched the tear drop to the floor", it is two words.
The one-word form is occurring more frequently, especially when used in adjectival form and in the eyecare business, in which I am employed. "Eyecare" doesn't appear in most dictionaries, apparently because assumption is that it is two words, and "eye care" is the more common spelling. However, in my opinion, logic and the spelling evolutionary process (two words, then hyphenated, then one word) favor the one-word spelling "eyecare". -CRM
eye
A:The first three New Testament gospels are known as the synoptic gospels. The word 'synoptic' means 'seen with the same eye' and is used to describe them because, when laid in parallel and 'seen with the same eye' in the original Greek language, it can be demonstrated that one gospel (Mark) must have been the original from which the other two were copied.
From a Greek word meaning "mark joining two syllables or words."
This is not a punctuation mark in standard English. This is more used in note-taking and formal logic. It is used to denote the word "therefore."
One your right eye switches is good luck when your left eye switches it is bad luck
The term brand name is written as two words.The term trademark, however, is written as one word in some English-speaking countries, such as the US, and as two words (trade mark) in others, such as Australia.
"Bookwork" is one word, not two.