PROBABLY walk
butterfly
Yes Housefly is a compound word because its two words made to a word. where does the fly it lives in a house. house + fly = Housefly so housefly is a compound word
weight fly sand
The word 'paper' will make each a compound word:paper weightfly papersand paper
The word you're looking for is.... paper !
I would not say so because it is divided by a dash
barfly butterfly dragonfly housefly flypaper flyover flyswatter
Yes, a compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that form a word with a meaning of its own: butter+ fly = butterfly.
Yes. butter + fly = butterfly
The word fly (and the plural flies) is the noun form, a common concrete noun, a word for an insect.The abstract noun form for the verb to fly is flyability.The word fly is not an adjective; terms such as flypaper or fly-by are compound words. The adjective forms are the present participle, flying, and the past participle flown.And, last but not least, the word 'fly' used as an adjective is a slang term.
A compound word is a word that is composed of two or more separate words that are combined to make a new word. For example, combine dragon and fly to make the word dragonfly which has a completely different meaning than either of the original words. One takes a root word, like the example "fly" and adds a descriptive word such as "dragon" to get dragonfly. In a related question, "treetop" applied. A word with two parts (for example, butterfly is a compound word because is has butter and then fly) others could be: paperclip, newsstand, newspaper, eyelid, bedrock, ladybug, pigtail, pigpen, flowerpot, handbag, bedtime, handshake, ect.
Type your answer here... fly
The word 'dragonfly' is a compound word made up of the noun 'dragon' and the noun 'fly', to form dragonfly, a noun with a meaning of its own.