No. The adjective or adverb phrase is two words, e.g. We will have to wait at least an hour.
Time and tide are two things, so you can substitute the word "they" for the two - that makes the statement "They wait for no one." It's "Time and tide wait for no one."If you cannot replace the items by the word "they" and have it make sense, then you'd use the singular form.
First, "wait up" is NOT "a" word, it it two words! Please do not wait up for me tonight, I am going to be home very late.
No, the word "staff" does not need to be pluralized when listing more than one person. "Staff" is already a collective noun that refers to a group of people, so it remains the same whether there is one person or multiple people.
The word "personnel" with two N's comes from the French word "personnel" which means staff or workforce. It is used in English to refer to the employees or staff of a company or organization. The double N helps to differentiate the word from "personal," which relates to private matters or individual characteristics.
The correct form is "two staff".
"Bookwork" is one word, not two.
If you mean two-word phrase, it's "half staff."
no it is not an one word it is of two word
I think the word "ongoing" is only one word, but it has two syllables that are two separate words.
The word "hairbrush" is typically written as one word, not two.
It is one word.