The compound noun is grandmother (grand+mother), a word for the mother of your father or your mother.
The compound noun is "paternal grandmother."
Noun+
Yes, "mother-in-law" is a compound noun made up of three words: mother, in, and law.
Yes, the noun grandmother is a compound noun, a combination of the adjective 'grand' and the noun 'mother', joined to form a noun with a meaning of its own. The noun grandmother is a common noun (lower case 'g'), unless you are referring to a specific grandmother.
Yes, "mother-in-law" is a compound word. It is made up of three words ("mother," "in," and "law") that have been combined to form a single word with a specific meaning.
Yes, the word "grandfather" is a compound word composed of the words "grand" and "father" combined to form a new word with a specific meaning.
No, "online" is a closed compound word, not a compound noun.
Yes, the word grandmother is a noun, a singular, common, compound noun; a word for the mother of your mother or father; a word for a person.
Yes, mother-in-law is a hyphenated compound noun.
Yes, "mother-in-law" is a compound word. It is made up of three words ("mother," "in," and "law") that have been combined to form a single word with a specific meaning.
Yes, the noun 'mother-in-law' is a compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.
Yes!
Yes.
The noun 'brood' is a word for a group of young animals or birds produced in one birth or hatching. Example compound sentence:I enjoy watching the Decorah Eagles on line, which are a mother, a father, and a brood of three eaglets.
The noun father-in-law is a word for the father of one's spouse; a word for a person.The noun father-in-law is a hyphenated, compound noun.The plural form of the noun is fathers-in-law.
"Mother tongue" refers to the first language a person learns from birth, typically from their parents or family. It is the language that a person is most proficient in and feels most comfortable communicating in.
The compound nouns are sister-in-law and mother-in-law.
Grandfather is a compound noun. Grand is an adjective and father is a noun. There are no root words for grand or father
"Mother" in Esperanto is "patrino", a compound of "patro" (father) and "-in-" (female).