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no
Yes, anyway is a compound word. any + way = anyway Both "any" and "way" are words on their own. So, when you put them together, you get a compound word.
a compound word beginning with cart is any word that begins with cart and has another word in it.
Yes, "freedom" is not a compound word. It is a single word that stands alone and does not contain any smaller words within it.
Coat rack would be the description, but it is 2 words not one compound word. I can't think of any compound word that would work.
anywhere anytime anyone anything
A closed compound word is a type of compound word where the words are joined together without any spaces or hyphens, forming a single word. Examples of closed compound words include "classroom," "baseball," and "birthday."
you can put a compound word into any sentence you want but it has to make sense.(see what i did there)
Yes it is - Although it is a complete word in it's own right, as with any compound word it is constructed from other 'complete' words - 'Some' & 'time' are simple words in their own right - these words combine to give the new word 'sometime'
yes anywhere could be a compound word.
Well a compound word is word(S) made up into a bigger word so I would think that together because it consists of the words to get her=together, My answer is YES A compound word is more than simply a word made up of other words. The components must be valid English words AND they have to be related in some way to the compound. In that sense, "together" is only VERY loosely a compound word because it's derived from the infinitive form "to" and an old German word meaning "gather". The fact that it can be decomposed into three unrelated words does not make it a true compound of "to", "get" and "her", any more than "bulletin" would be considered a compound because it contains "bullet" and "in".