Yes, "well-nourished" should be hyphenated when used as a compound adjective before a noun, such as in "well-nourished children." The hyphen helps clarify that "well" modifies "nourished" together as a single descriptor. However, if it appears after the noun, it can be written without a hyphen, as in "the children are well nourished."
It should be hyphenated.
Yes
You should hyphenate well nourished and well developed IF followed by a noun - i.e., "well-nourished and well-developed man" or "well-nourished and well-developed patient". If the noun is before these, then you would not hyphenate - i.e., "The patient is well nourished and well developed". This would also be true for the following: "well-healed scar" or "the scar is well healed". Answer provided by a medical transcriptionist with 18 years experience.
Yes it should be hyphenated.
Yes it should be hyphenated: well-liked.
It should be hyphenated when it's an adjective.
No. Well above is not hyphenated.
"Well-maintained" should be hyphenated when it is used as a compound adjective before a noun. For example, you would say "the well-maintained garden." However, when it follows the noun, it should be written as two separate words, such as "the garden is well maintained."
Yes, "well-thought-out" is hyphenated because it is a compound adjective that describes a noun. The hyphens help clarify that "well," "thought," and "out" work together to modify the noun that follows. When used as an adjective, it should always be hyphenated to maintain clarity.
It should be hyphenated when it is being used as an adjective.
Yes, it should be hyphenated.
Yes it should be hyphenated.