There are two syllables, En-joyed.
The word enjoy has two syllables. The syllables in the word are en-joy.
In the context of "overall the service was good", it is one word. In the context of "he chose this one over all the rest", it is two words.
It is two words. Writing it as one is acceptable in the UK and is referred to as a "Britishism." But in American grammar, it is always two separate words.
In current usage, photo shoot is two words. However, language changes over time and someday photo shoot may be one word.
There are two syllables, En-joyed.
There are two syllables. En-joyed.
The word enjoy has two syllables. The syllables in the word are en-joy.
i think it one word
"Overtime" is one word when referring to extra hours worked beyond the regular schedule.
In the context of "overall the service was good", it is one word. In the context of "he chose this one over all the rest", it is two words.
Yes, as overpopulated. It is not used as two words.
Some one syllable words that rhyme with overjoyed are Bloyd, Boyd, Boyde, Cloyd, Floyd, Freud, Gloyd, Royd, toyed, void. Some two syllable words that rhyme with overjoyed are annoyed, avoid, deployed, destroyed, devoid, employed, enjoyed. Some three syllable words that rhyme with overjoyed are redeployed, Sigmund Freud, unemployed.
Generally, it's one word.
It is two words. Writing it as one is acceptable in the UK and is referred to as a "Britishism." But in American grammar, it is always two separate words.
In current usage, photo shoot is two words. However, language changes over time and someday photo shoot may be one word.
Yes, as overzealous (too zealous). It cannot be two words.