You should hyphenate "set up" when it is used as a compound adjective before a noun, as in "set-up process" or "set-up fee." However, when used as a verb phrase, such as "I will set up the meeting," it should not be hyphenated. Always consider the context to determine the correct form.
Can you, or should you? You can hyphenate it if you're moving between lines in a paragraph and need to break up the word. You shouldn't hyphenate it normally.
No. This phrasal verb is made up of two separate words.
In Microsoft Word page set up is in the page layout menu. This is where you set up your page -- adjust margins, set the page orientation, set up columns, add page breaks.
The African Luhya term for the English word 'set up' is "kasia".
Up
yes
In order to give you a synonym of the word set up for a specific sentence one needs to know what the sentence is.
An estate should be set up as soon as possible. Any one can pass on anytime and the estate needs to be set up.
"Use the owner's manual." "I should have tried reading the instruction manual before attempting to set up my stereo."
his match someone for him
An if, then statement.
Yes, "upset" is a compound word. It is formed by combining the prefix "up-" and the root word "set." In this case, the prefix "up-" serves to intensify the meaning of the root word "set," resulting in a new word with a distinct meaning.