A punctuation mark that is used to connect to words together and separate syllables.
(e.g. blahblahblah-blahblahblah-blahblahblah.)-
no.
Quaid Smith-Colombini and Marcus Burnheim-Foster
Yes: forty ten-thousandths.
(The hyphon indicates a syllable) Spon-ges There are 2 syllables.
No, a capital letter is not used after a hyphen unless it falls at the beginning of a sentence or is part of a proper noun. The word after the hyphen should be lowercase unless it is a proper noun.
No, appealing is not a compound word as a compound word is a word that consists of two or more words joined together without a hyphon to create another word e.g upon - made up of up and on, moreover - made up of more and over.
Donyell marshall had twelve in 13/3/05 and Kobe had 12 on 7/1/03. the website basketball-reference has all the nba records pretty much and they update it often. remember da hyphon
No, appealing is not a compound word as a compound word is a word that consists of two or more words joined together without a hyphon to create another word e.g upon - made up of up and on, moreover - made up of more and over.
Comma, period, question mark, exclamation point, colon, semicolon.
Some common punctuation marks in English grammar include the period (.), comma (,), question mark (?), exclamation point (!), semicolon (;), colon (:), apostrophe ('), quotation marks (" "), and hyphen (-). These punctuation marks are used to clarify meaning, indicate pauses, and organize written language.