Cleanup is a noun -- The cleanup, after the flood, was long and tedious.
Clean up is a verb -- I will clean up the back yard next.
A compound word is formed when two or more words are combined to create a new word with a distinct meaning. Typically, compound words are written as one word, with a hyphen, or as separate words. To identify a compound word, you can look for two separate words that join together to convey a specific idea or concept.
A one-word compound is one type of compound word. It is a single word made by joining two words together with no space between them.A compound word can be:- one word made from two, or- two or more separate words with spaces in between, or- two or more words joined by hyphens.Here are the three types of compound words:- The closed form, such as notebook or keyboard, joins two or more words together to create a new one-word compound word.- The open form, such as post office or half sister, with spaces between the words, is called a compound word even though it is actually two (or more) separate words.- The hyphenated form, such as six-pack, or son-in-law, has a dash between the words.
No. It is two words which form a complex noun if you want to call it that, but because it is two words, it does not count as a complex word. It is much like paper weight. It is a weight for paper, and one noun, yes, but two words, and thus not a compound word.
This word has two main definitions. Number one is to be killed with a poisonous gas and number two is to be exposed to a poisonous gas. Those are the two main ones.
A compound word is two words put together to form a new word. (Example: Basket+Ball= Basketball) So, No, Batteries is not a compound word, it is the plural form of battery (which is one word).
It's one word if used as a noun, and two if used as a verb. The school-sponsored cleanup was a great success. Uncle John went to the track; he cleaned up!
Cleanup (one word) is a noun. It's the act of cleaning something up (environmental cleanup). Clean up (two words) is a phrasal verb.
Cleanup is the main unscrambled word for CEUPLAN.
It is used as one word.
As used in the sentence, the word 'assisted' is the past tense of the verb to assist. The verb 'assisted' is the act that 'you' performed with the cleanup; to assist is an action verb.
no it is not an one word it is of two word
Hipbone is one word.
I think the word "ongoing" is only one word, but it has two syllables that are two separate words.
The word "hairbrush" is typically written as one word, not two.
It is one word.
one word
One word, two syllables