No. The word neighbor or neighbour is not, and neighborhood is more of a suffix than a compound form. On the other hand, "next door" is an idiomatic compound adverb, or a hyphenated adjective as in "next-door neighbor."
Yes, "neighbour" is a compound word formed by combining the words "neigh" and "bour" together.
Yes
Yes
The base word for "Neighbour" is "neigh."
The contraction (not a compound word) is doesn't.
No, "respectful" is not a compound word. Instead, it is a single word derived from the root word "respect."
No, "nearby" is not a compound word. It is a single word formed by combining "near" and "by."
The compound word is "disjointedkeyboardappealinganother."
The word neighbor (neighbour) is the abstract noun form.
The Irish word for 'neighbour' is 'comharsa'.
No It's not a compound word
No, the noun 'neighbour' (US spelling 'neighbor') is a concrete noun, a word for a physical person or thing.
The contraction (not a compound word) is doesn't.
Upwards is a compound word.
There is no compound word.A compound word is a word like bus-stop.Husban is spelt like this husband
Upstairs is a compound word, so it is one word.
Yes, the word "railroad" is a compound word because it is made up of two separate words, "rail" and "road," that are joined together to create a new word with a specific meaning.
Mango is not a compound word.
A non compound word is , a word with one word not two . For a example a compound word is snowflake. An non compound is hot cheetos.
In the King James version * Note the English spelling used throughout - neighbour, with a 'u' in it. the word - neighbours' - appears once the word - neighbours - appears 21 times the word - neighbour's - appears 28 times the word - neighbour - appears 107 times