The phrase "above captioned" is not hyphenated. It is typically written as two separate words. However, if used as a compound adjective before a noun, it can be hyphenated as "above-captioned" to clarify that it describes the noun that follows.
No. Well above is not hyphenated.
No, well above average is not hyphenated.
yes
Yes, "above-mentioned" is typically hyphenated when used as an adjective before a noun. For example, you would say "the above-mentioned report." However, when it appears after the noun, it is usually not hyphenated, as in "the report mentioned above."
The term "above named" is typically not hyphenated. It is used as an adjective phrase to refer to a person or entity previously mentioned in a document or text. Therefore, it is written as "above named" without a hyphen.
Kimberly-Clark
Nancy Dye has written: 'Using captioned media in the classroom' -- subject(s): Captioned media in reading, Reading, Aids and devices
It is not hyphenated.
No it's not hyphenated.
Motorcycle is not hyphenated
words are only hyphenated when they have a separate meaning when separated than they do when hyphenated
Closed captioned, if available. And, only at home on their TV. There is no closed-captioned at movie theaters. And so, subtitles may not be in a language that they can understand.