The term "pro-British" requires a hyphen to clarify that it is a compound adjective describing a supportive stance towards British people or culture. The hyphen helps to avoid ambiguity and ensures that "pro" is clearly linked to "British," indicating a specific meaning rather than interpreting "pro" and "British" as separate elements. Without the hyphen, the phrase could be misread or lose its intended meaning.
It does not need to have a hyphen! :)
No, the word "nineteen" does not need a hyphen when written numerically.
No
I do not believe that multitasking is supposed to have a hyphen.
It's not a word in the dictionary, so yes, use the hyphen.
You typically need only capitalize after sentence-ending punctuation, which a hyphen is not.
no
No.
no
No
Yes, in-home does need a hyphen. It's two words put together to form a word for a different concept.
heart-felt