No, the word 'together' does not require a hyphen
Hyphens are almost always aesthetic. They aren't really necessary, they just help the reader understand that the the hyphenated words are tied together.
A hyphenated compound word is a combination of two or more words joined together by a hyphen to form a single concept or term. For example, "mother-in-law" or "well-being" are hyphenated compound words.
Well-to-do and well-being are hyphenated words. Another hyphenated word is the direction west-northwest.
Like many other words, it depends . . . If the words are used together as an adjective, they are hyphenated. "Alice bought a 90-cent picture frame." If the words are just nouns, they are not hyphenated. "Alice's picture frame cost 90 cents".
No, "full spectrum" is not hyphenated when used as a noun phrase. However, it can be hyphenated as "full-spectrum" when used as an adjective before a noun, such as in "full-spectrum lighting." The hyphen helps clarify that "full" modifies "spectrum" together as a single descriptive term.
Use the hyphen or run them together as one word.
It is not hyphenated.
No, "federally owned" is not hyphenated. When used as a compound adjective, it is typically written as two separate words. However, if it appears before a noun to modify it, it can be used as "federally-owned property," where "federally-owned" is hyphenated to clarify that both words together describe the noun.
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
Yes, "half-page ad" should be hyphenated to show that "half" and "page" are acting together as a compound adjective to describe "ad."