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It may be spelled coordinator or co-ordinator.Coordinator is more common in use.
The word "in-depth" is correctly spelled with a hyphen when used as an adjective, to mean through or detailed (e.g. an in-depth analysis).In its adverb use, it remains a two-word prepositional phrase, "in depth."
i can enunciate correctly
The dog buried its bone in the yard.
A hyphen (-) is used to join or combine words or numbers together or to separate syllables. Ex: We have to study African-Americans this year! (joining words) We have ninety-three people in band. (joining numbers) ve-he-ment (separating syllables)
Yes it's correct.
Yes, the hyphen goes in the word "dead-end" because the two words together have a different meaning than separately.
No, excitingly is one word so you would not use a hyphen in it.
Email is correct. Some people still use e-mail, with a hyphen, but email without a hyphen is used much more often.
You do not use a hyphen when writing square feet. Using a hyphen would make it one word which should not be the case.
how to use we student in a sentence
What a hyphen does is it is showing you what you are saying in the sentence; it represents something. It is NOT to be used as a pause. Commas and semicolon's are used for that. For example, if I wanted to say something about a car, I would say "This car is very nice - it has leather seats." The hyphen is a place holder if you do not want to end a sentence because you are describing what you are talking about in the first part of the sentence.
It may be spelled coordinator or co-ordinator.Coordinator is more common in use.
"He answered the difficult question correctly."
You can use "wear" and "where" in one sentence like this: "I can't decide where to wear my new dress to the party." In this sentence, "wear" refers to putting on clothing, while "where" indicates the location or event.
Stepmother is one word. So, you do not have to use a hyphen. Similarly: stepfather, stepsister, etc.
I would use it correctly in a sentence, of course. Thank you for asking.