Some examples of hyphenated compound words are:
Note: Some compound words may or may not be hyphenated, for example, the adjective 'self evident' may not be hyphenated when it is the only word describing the noun, but should be hyphenated when combined with another adjective or an adverb, for example, 'clearly self-evident'.
Compound nouns are either separate words (apple juice), or hyphenated words (brother-in-law), or one word (headmaster).
Blue- eyed
certain compound words that cannot be written as one word are HYPHENATEDexattorney-in-law
Examples of hyphenated compound nouns where the first word is pluralized include "five-star hotels," "six-pack abs," and "ten-dollar bills."
"Left-handed" is a hyphenated compound word.
No, "starting point" is not hyphenated. It is two separate words.
Three types of compound words with examples containing "eye": Open compound word: black eye Close compound word: eyewitness Hyphenated compound word: one-eyed-king
There are three types of compound words: closed compound word - two different words put together to make a new word examples - boyfriend, without, mankind hyphenated compound word - i.e. level-headed, fun-loving, mind-boggling open compound word - two words that go together but there's a space between them examples: bus driver, candy cane, draft pick brown bag
Some examples of hyphenated compound words are well-known, free-range, up-to-date, self-control, and mother-in-law. These words typically combine two or more words with a hyphen to create a single concept or descriptor.
home grown deep fried
Examples of compound words:airplanebaseballclotheslinedreamboateyebrowfoghorngreyhoundheatwaveintojumpsuitkeepsakelimelightmoreovernightlightoffshootplaymatequicksandroadworksunshinetimepieceunderstandvineyardwhitewashyearlongzookeeper
Examples of traditionally hyphenated compound nouns are:blue-greenfive-year-oldjack-in-the-boxjack-in-the-pulpitmother-in-law, father-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-lawsix-packT-shirt (or tee-shirt)x-ray