Generally co-author should be hyphenated, but the relaxed rules of modern times often present coauthor as one word
According to the sources I've found on a quick search, you should hyphenate 'coauthor', i.e., it would better be: "co-author".
The term used as a descriptive term (adjunct) should be hyphenated (one-owner) but usually is not.
The term multistory (UK multistorey) are apparently not hyphenated.
The term seesaw is one word, not hyphenated. The synonym, teeter-totter often is.The term can be used as an adjective to describe shifting situations, such as sports scores.
Generally co-author should be hyphenated, but the relaxed rules of modern times often present coauthor as one word
Yes it should be hyphenated.
There is no one-word anagram, and no valid hyphenated form. The letters spell the word pairs "coauthor is" and "auto choirs." It is likely that the scramble was miscopied.
The term used as a descriptive term (adjunct) should be hyphenated (one-owner) but usually is not.
According to the sources I've found on a quick search, you should hyphenate 'coauthor', i.e., it would better be: "co-author".
Yes it should be hyphenated.
Yes, it should be hyphenated.
Copay is a relatively recent term. It is not hyphenated. In general, short words like this are not hyphenated.
Yes it should be hyphenated.
yes check-up should be hyphenated
It should be hyphenated.
yup!! :)