Yes, "headteacher" is typically written as one word in British English. However, in American English, the term is often written as two separate words: "head teacher." Usage may vary depending on regional preferences, but both forms are widely understood.
The plural word for more than one teacher is teachers.
Teacherness is not even a suffix, nor a word.
I would assume teach, for a teacher is one that teaches. sometimes refered to as "teach" for short.
Yes, the noun 'teacher' is a singular noun, a word for one person.The plural noun is teachers.
The child sadly told his teacher that he stole her apple. (first thing that came in my head)
She promised to intercede for me with the head teacher.
There were no replies when the teacher shouted "Any one who responds to this question will have their head chopped off!"
no a head start teacher does not i know because my mom was a head start teacher!
The plural word for more than one teacher is teachers.
The word teacher means "One who imparts knowledge/information to others". The antonym to that would be "one who takes knowledge away from others," for which there is not a word.The word that you may be looking for is "Student" which is the opposite of teacher.
a professor
yes
A one-syllable word, yes.
The word 'teacher' is a noun, a singular, common, concrete noun; a word for a person.
Mentor
The feminine word of teacher is "teachress" or "female teacher".
a pre-k teacher or a head start teacher