Yes football is a compound word. The words are foot and ball.
Yes
footed
A sentence with a compound word is, He was excited about signing up to play football.
The phrase is spelled "football team". Football is a compound word made from combining "foot" and "ball". Team is a separate word.
The word is foot. football footnote footprint
The word football does not come from Latin. It is from the English language, and is a compound of foot and ball based on the Oxford English Dictionary.
There are numerous compound words in English with stress on the first syllable, such as "football," "New York," and "raincoat." The stress pattern can vary depending on the specific compound word.
The noun 'football' is a common, compound noun. The noun 'football' is a concrete, singular noun as a word for a type of ball. The noun 'football' is an abstract, uncountable noun as a word for a game and a type of sport.
No, it is not. A compound noun is a combination of a noun and another word, whether it be a noun (e.g. football), a verb (e.g. breakwater), an adjective (e.g. blackboard), or a preposition (e.g. underworld).
Football and footfall are two that come to mind.
Yes, the compound noun 'football practice' is a common noun, a general word for any instance of training a football team.
Yes, "oppression" is a compound word formed by combining the prefix "op-" and the root word "pression."
No jump rope is not a compound word. For example: bathroom,classroom, and are all compound words. The words: jump rope, line backer, and football field are all different things without the second word, but unless they are joined they aren't compound.