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Yes, 'tooth fairy' is a compound noun, a word for a character from folklore who issupposed to leave money under a child's pillow in place of a baby tooth that has just fallen out; a word for a character.
No one knows, only God and the Tooth Fairy. She'd probably have to fly more than a billion kilometers.
No, it is not. The word tooth is a noun, which can be used as a noun adjunct, as in tooth decay or tooth fairy. The verb (to tooth) means to add teeth to a tool or gear.
Yes, tooth fairy is a compound word, a separated compound noun.A compound word is a word made of two or more individual words that join to form a word with a meaning of its own.
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Check spelling-not an English word
Two words. Fairy tale.
yes, there are two words. The Modern word for Fairy is, as we all know, Fairy. But there is another way of spelling it. In older days, it was spelled faerie. Not sure if pronouncing makes a difference.
No, it is two words: fairy tale.
The word 'toothpick' will do. The two words are tooth and pick.
And that's the tooth! I have an aching tooth.