Depends on how your using it in a sentence. "Is everything alright?" "I got a B on my test. I didn't get them all right." Hope that will help to clarify
The term is always two words, of course.
All right is used in more formal writing. The word Alright is the one word spelling
No. The term is two words "right now" (at this very moment).
In the context of "overall the service was good", it is one word. In the context of "he chose this one over all the rest", it is two words.
one, but if you pronounce the 't' clearly, it can sound like there are two. there is only one syllable in the word right
It is properly written ALL DAY - two words.
"All right" is written as two words and "already" is one word.However, "alright" (the informal variant of all right) is written as one word.
It is a compound word although it is also one word.
All right is used in more formal writing. The word Alright is the one word spelling
One word, you got it right.
It's two. You have it right.
No it is not it is only one word forty-five <- you count that as ONE word right?
No. The term is two words "right now" (at this very moment).
In the context of "overall the service was good", it is one word. In the context of "he chose this one over all the rest", it is two words.
It can be written as one word or two or as a hyphenated word, all are correct.
Two hundred thousand, one hundred.
Well, first of all, it's eyewear, if it were one word. It is two words. Eye wear.
one, but if you pronounce the 't' clearly, it can sound like there are two. there is only one syllable in the word right