bond
Yes, "subforeman" is typically not hyphenated. It is a compound word formed by combining the prefix "sub-" with the noun "foreman."
No. The adjective hard describes work.Used as an adjective, the term hard-working can be hyphenated. e.g. hard-working man.
No
A hyphenated modifier is a compound adjective or adverb created by hyphenating multiple words together that work as one word. Example: He gave me that there's-a-dead-body-in-my-fridge sort of smile.
Yes, campsite (a camp location) is one word, also used hyphenated as camp-site.
No, "work-related" is hyphenated when used as an adjective before a noun, but not when used after the noun. For example: "He experienced work-related stress at his job" versus "The stress he experienced at work was related to his workload."
A word meaning to work closely with someone is collaborate.
Hyphenated is preferred- to minimize confusion. an off-work accident, for example.
The word 'work' is a noun as well as a verb. The noun'work' is a word for activity needing effort; a job someone is paid to do; the place someone does their job; something made or done at a job.The noun forms for the verb 'to word' are worker and the gerund, working.
He is an abscondee !!
The term "air bag" is classified as an open compound word, as it consists of two separate words that work together to convey a single concept. In contrast, a closed compound word combines two words into one (like "notebook"), while a hyphenated compound word connects them with a hyphen (like "mother-in-law"). Therefore, "air bag" maintains its individual word forms.
Lazy