Unequivocally it is evident that you are unsure about this. However, to disabuse of this uncertainty, here is some explicit and unambiguous information that will undoubtedly provide examples of not uncommon words, with which you are possibly not entirely unacquainted, and that should provide a clue to the answer to this good question.
The term is almost always hyphenated all-star.
words are only hyphenated when they have a separate meaning when separated than they do when hyphenated
No. This object-preposition-object idiom practically always follows the preposition "from" where the first time is the object of "from" and the whole 4-word group is an adverbial meaning "occasionally."
No, "homework" shouldn't be hyphenated.
All-consuming is hyphenated
Yes, it should always be hyphenated.
no never
Hyphens are almost always aesthetic. They aren't really necessary, they just help the reader understand that the the hyphenated words are tied together.
Yes. Always. Reference: Chicago Manual of Style
The term is almost always hyphenated all-star.
Yes, re-enter should always be hyphenated.
In the US, coworker is normally not hyphenated. However in the UK, it is usually co-worker.British English and U.S. English Hyphen UsageThere are some differences in the manner in which the hyphen is used in the United Kingdom and in the United States, although these differences actually are rather minimal. For example, in the UK certain prefixes will be hyphenated when they will not be so separated in the US. For another example, the word preschool in the US is hyphenated pre-school in the UK.
It is not hyphenated.
Motorcycle is not hyphenated
No it's not hyphenated.
words are only hyphenated when they have a separate meaning when separated than they do when hyphenated
It can be one word "reelecting" (previously many such words were always hyphenated, and some still are).