You are probably asking about the word waistline, which is the measurement around one's waist. As you can see, waistline is one word. Note also that the first part is waist, the (usually) narrower part of the body between the hips and ribs, and not waste, which means to use without getting any result or profit or to fail to use.
usually one.
one
It means to put one or more syllables on one line and add a hypen, and put the rest of the word on the next line. This is done when you can get part of a word, but not all of a word on a line.
BOTH..... but it depends on how u use it
The word 'waste' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'waste' is a word for material that is not wanted; the unusable remains or byproducts of something; a word for an act of expending something carelessly, extravagantly, or to no purpose; a word for a thing.The noun form of the verb to waste is the gerund, wasting.The noun form for the adjective wasteful is wastefulness.
The word clothesline has two syllables. Clothes-line.
According to the 11th Collegiate Merriam-Webster's Dictionary, time line is two words.
No, "white line" is not a compound word. It is composed of two separate words, "white" and "line". Compound words are formed by combining two or more words to create a new word with a specific meaning.
It means to put one or more syllables on one line and add a hypen, and put the rest of the word on the next line. This is done when you can get part of a word, but not all of a word on a line.
BOTH..... but it depends on how u use it
Words. Or in certain rare cases, one word. But there is always at least one word. The best one-word line is from King John: "Death." There are some pretty good two-word lines, such as the opening line from Hamlet: "Who's there?" or Beatrice's line from Much Ado About Nothing: "Kill Claudio."
The word 'waste' is both a verb and a noun.The noun 'waste' is a word for material that is not wanted; the unusable remains or byproducts of something; a word for an act of expending something carelessly, extravagantly, or to no purpose; a word for a thing.The noun form of the verb to waste is the gerund, wasting.The noun form for the adjective wasteful is wastefulness.
The word clothesline has two syllables. Clothes-line.
If two lines are parallel, then they will both have the same slope.
You do not generally hyphenate the word stepchild, because it is not a hyphenated word. If the question is where to hyphenate stepchild if you have to break it across two lines, it is not difficult to determine this, because the two syllables are actually separate words: step and child. If you have to hyphenate the word to break it, you would put step- on one line and child on the next. If the word is all on one line, you do not hyphenate it.
One waste product is carbon dioxide.
According to the 11th Collegiate Merriam-Webster's Dictionary, time line is two words.
one of them is excess waste and i dont know the other
It's one word. It's a compound word made up of two smaller words. An airline (one word) is a company that runs airplanes. An air line (two words) is a flexible tube or hose attached to an air or oxygen source supplying air or oxygen to a person who is ill or under water. Airlines and air lines, of course, are the plural versions.