mayor- elect
pro- labor
passer- by
court- martial
grant- in - aid
attorney- at- law
go- between
mother- in- law
jack- in- the- box
sergeant- at- arms
master- at- arms
no never
Examples of hyphenated compound nouns where the first word is pluralized include "five-star hotels," "six-pack abs," and "ten-dollar bills."
Yes, proper nouns can be hyphenated when it is necessary for clarity or readability. For example, "Jean-Paul" or "New York-based" are hyphenated proper nouns. It is important to follow the conventions of style guides or specific usage guidelines when deciding to hyphenate a proper noun.
The term 'separated noun' is used for the open spaced compound noun. There are three types of compound nouns, closed, hyphenated, and open spaced (separated). Examples: open spaced (separated): tennis shoe, front door, paint brush hyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, six-pack closed: bathtub, baseball, houseboat
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
It is hyphenated as "ninety-five thousand."
Five nouns that are places are:countryparkislandRhode Islandneighborhood
Five common nouns are:grandmotherknowledgecucumberhighwaymail
Compound nouns are either separate words (apple juice), or hyphenated words (brother-in-law), or one word (headmaster).
No. I cannot see any hyphen.
The five types of nouns are: common nouns (e.g. book, dog), proper nouns (e.g. John, Paris), concrete nouns (e.g. tree, car), abstract nouns (e.g. love, happiness), and collective nouns (e.g. team, family).
Like many other words, it depends . . . If the words are used together as an adjective, they are hyphenated. "Alice bought a 90-cent picture frame." If the words are just nouns, they are not hyphenated. "Alice's picture frame cost 90 cents".