No, the word 'childhood' is a common, abstract, compound noun.
A possessive noun is a noun that indicates that something belongs to that noun by use of an apostrophe -s ('s) at the end of the noun, or just an apostrophe (') at the end of a plural noun that ends with -s.
The possessive form for the noun childhood is childhood's.
example: A childhood's years are fleeting.
No, "bulldog" and "childhood" are not compound words. Compound words are formed when two separate words are joined together to create a new word with a distinct meaning.
boyhoodbrotherhoodchildhoodfatherhoodgirlhoodhoodwinkmanhoodmotherhoodparenthoodpriesthoodsisterhoodwidowhoodwomanhood
The noun childhood is a singular, common, abstract, compound noun; a word for the time of being a child.
Yes, the word 'childhood' is a noun, a word for a period in a person's life; a word for a thing. The noun 'childhood' is a closed compound noun (no space); a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own. The noun 'childhood' is a common noun, a general word for the childhood of anyone, anywhere. A common noun is capitalized only when it is the first word in a sentence.
"Childhood" is one word.
A synonym for the word 'childhood' is 'youth'.
No, building is not a compound word.
The contraction (not a compound word) is doesn't.
Upwards is a compound word.
There is no compound word.A compound word is a word like bus-stop.Husban is spelt like this husband
Upstairs is a compound word, so it is one word.
It cannot be a compound word.