Yes, there is. Often, after a hyphenated word has been used for a very long time and is used by many people, the hyphen will be eliminated. email is an example of this. Originally the word was e-mail.
"Example" is a word that begins with "ex." The prefix "ex-" in the sense of "former," takes a hyphen: ex-wife, ex-President.
No, the word "ex" is not a pronoun. It is a prefix or a slang term commonly used to refer to a former spouse or partner.
The term "ex-" in words like "ex-husband" is a Latin prefix meaning "out of" or "former." It denotes someone who was previously in a particular role or relationship. In the case of "ex-husband," it refers to a person who was once a husband but no longer is.
ex-husband = Imehrman (אימערמאַן)
The correct term is "ex-wife," with a hyphen.
Exactly the way you did in your question. The term father-in-law is hyphenated, and the addition of the ex- prefix requires a hyphen as well. This is not a standard genealogical term, and it may be clearer to say "ex-husband's father" or ex-wife's father.
There should be no spaces within a hyphenated word. For example: ex-husband.Note in the example that there are no spaces before and after the hyphen.
hyphen
No there's not a hyphen.
you spelt the the word wrong it is 'rescheduling' no it does not have a hyphen
The dictionaries that list it use a hyphen.
No, excitingly is one word so you would not use a hyphen in it.