No, "good looking" does not have a hyphen when used as a predicate adjective, as in "She is good looking." However, when used as a compound adjective before a noun, it is often hyphenated: "He is a good-looking man."
Yes, "younger-looking" should have a hyphen when used as a compound adjective before a noun. The hyphen clarifies that "younger" modifies "looking" as a single idea describing the noun that follows. For example, you would write "She has a younger-looking appearance."
good bye good-bye goodbye (this is the right way)
"Good-bye" traditionally has a hyphen to indicate that it is a compound word formed from "good" and "bye," which is a variation of "goodbye." The hyphen helps clarify the relationship between the two parts, signaling that they combine to convey a single idea of parting. However, it is commonly written as "goodbye" without a hyphen in modern usage. The hyphenated form is less common today but can still be seen in certain contexts.
You say "A hyphen" because the sound of the letter "H" at the beginning of the word "hyphen" is pronounced, making it a consonant sound.
'merry-go-round', ugly-looking, un-american and things similar to that :3
No, it does not have a hyphen.
It Is A Special Hyphen
A colon is this : and a hyphen is this -
multimedia - NO hyphen
It does not need to have a hyphen! :)
No there's not a hyphen.
hyphen