Every one who is an American is unhyphenated. Anyone else how claims different is has issues. (Racial, Self-doubt, hatered...ect)
Progressive Conservative Party leader John Diefenbaker
Social security are two, unhyphenated, words.
Many words that began as hyphenated terms have become correct as single, unhyphenated words. It is correct to refer to "take-out food", but it is also correct to say "takeout food".
The spelling of the adjective is hyphenated "multi-year."(Only Wiktionary shows a single word, unhyphenated form.)
It depends on the person counting. Some would say 1, calling winter wonderland a compound noun. Those who reserve that term for unhyphenated compounds would say 2, counting winteras a noun modifier. And of course, one could say three, since wonderland itself is a compound of two nouns.
No, "counterintuitive" does not have a hyphen. It is a single, unhyphenated word used to describe something that goes against what one would intuitively expect.
The word "reopening" is not hyphenated. It is a compound word formed from the prefix "re-" and the word "opening." In standard usage, it is written as a single, unhyphenated term.
you would just say American idol if you were refering to the American idol in America whitch it would not be American idol anywhere else because its American but back to the point....you would say American Idol for American idol.
No, the word "prebuilt" does not have a hyphen. It is commonly written as a single, unhyphenated word. Hyphenation is not needed because "pre" is a well-established prefix in English.
No, "rescheduled" is not hyphenated. It is a compound word formed by the prefix "re-" and the verb "scheduled." When combining a prefix with a verb, it typically remains unhyphenated in standard usage.
American = Amelika
The same, but in an American accent.