This is one of the most common mistakes make today regarding hyphenation. Editor in chief is not hyphenated, although more and more people seem to be disregarding this rule.
If you have a paper dictionary lying around somewhere, look it up.
I suspect that as time goes on (and this might be happening even now in the most current editions of dictionaries), the hyphenated version will become an alternate version.
Yes, "editor-at-large" should be hyphenated.
Yes, editor-in-chief is a compound noun. There are three types of compound nouns: open spaced: tennis shoe, front door, paint brush hyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, editor-in-chief closed: bathtub, baseball, houseboat
Capitalized, but not hyphenated: Commander in Chief
The opposite of editor in chief would be a junior editor or an assistant editor. These positions typically have less responsibility and authority compared to the editor in chief.
The plural form of the compound noun editor-in-chief is editors-in-chief.The correct plural possessive form is editors-in-chief's.
The term 'editor-in-chief' is a compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.The compound noun 'editor-in-chief' is a word for a person.
who is the editor -in chief- of hindustantimes
The possessive form is editor-in-chief's.Example: Send this to the editor-in-chief's desk.
The Editor in Chief
The chief editor of Dinamalar is R. Lakshmipathy.
Julian Assange is the spokesperson and editor in chief for WikiLeaks.
The Chief Editor of the Telugu daily newspaper Andhrabhoomi is P. Kaushik Rao.