The term "post sales" can be hyphenated as "post-sales" when used as a compound adjective before a noun, such as "post-sales support." However, when used as a noun phrase, it is typically written as two separate words, "post sales." The choice often depends on the context and style guide being followed.
Yes, post-war would be correct.
Without a hyphen
It usually is, but is occasionally seen without a hyphen and spelt as one word
No, a hyphen is not needed.
No, Sales, as a Revenue Account of the Income Statement, is a temporary account, which should not appear on the post-closing trial balance.
without a hyphen idiot
No. Fully, when used as an adverb, is not followed by a hyphen. :)
There should be a hyphen in twenty-three.
I believe anything-American is hyphenated and the hyphen takes the place of ' and. '
You do not use a hyphen when writing square feet. Using a hyphen would make it one word which should not be the case.
no a hyphen doesnt touch rain a hyphen never touches rain at any cicumstances
Yes, "five-day trip" should have a hyphen. The hyphen is used to create a compound adjective that describes the noun "trip." Without the hyphen, it can lead to confusion about whether "five" and "day" are intended to be read together as a single descriptor.