You are probably going for blueprint.
Yes. Fireplace = Fire + Place and means the place where the fire is.
Yes, "waterbottle" is a compound word made up of the words "water" and "bottle" joined together to form a new word with a distinct meaning.
No. re- is a prefix, not a separate word.
Yes the word because is a compound word. The words are be and cause.
Yes, "greenhouse" is a compound word because it is made up of two separate words, "green" and "house," that come together to create a new word with its own meaning.
Yes. Fireplace = Fire + Place and means the place where the fire is.
Yes, "birthplace" is a compound word, made up of the words "birth" and "place" combined to form a single word with its own distinct meaning.
The word is commonplace.
Yes, "outdoor" is a compound word. A compound word is formed by combining two separate words to create a new word with a distinct meaning. In this case, "out" and "door" are combined to form "outdoor," which refers to things or activities that take place outside or in the open air.
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Not in English. It comes from a compound word meaning "wing-finger" in Greek.
No. when you say compound word it consists of 2 different word that when combined will have another meaning.
Examples of compound nouns for the word 'place' are:fireplacemarketplaceplaceholderplace matplacementshowplace
Yes it is. Play and ground is a word and it has a meaning
As both "place" and "mat" are words, placemat is a compound word.
'She has' are two individual words, not compound; you can make a one word contraction she's meaning she has.
Thunderstruck is a compound word, it is a combination of two words with a single meaning