From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishup‧keep /ˈʌpkiːp/ noun [uncountable] 1 LOOK AFTER somethingthe process of keeping something in good condition SYN maintenanceupkeep of Most of the money is spent on the upkeep of the building.
the process or activity of providing an establishment, machine, person, etc., with necessary or proper maintenance, repairs, support, or the like: The machine's faulty operation shows that no one has attended to its upkeep.
It is one word: upkeep.
See "Related Links" below to Merriam-Webster.
Depending on the sentence. I think two.
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Keep is one word unkept is one word
Us in one word
two words
Two
one word
Two.
One word Teapot is one word It is made up of two single words - tea and pot But when they are combined it makes a new word
I'm pretty sure it is two words because if you look it up in a dictionary as one word it isn't there.
Instore is generally quoted as one word, meaning to 'store up' or 'contain'
Pick up is two words although, depending on how it is used, it is sometimes written with a hyphen between the words like so: pick-up.
Yes it's one word - upkeep.
Two.
It is one word. No matter what Kendall says.
"Up to" can be two separate words or hyphenated as "up-to."
One word Teapot is one word It is made up of two single words - tea and pot But when they are combined it makes a new word
one word-updraft
I'm pretty sure it is two words because if you look it up in a dictionary as one word it isn't there.
No, "fingernail" is not one word. It is a compound word made up of two words: "finger" and "nail."
Instore is generally quoted as one word, meaning to 'store up' or 'contain'
In the context "this setup works great!", it is one word. In the context "I have to set up the table still", it is two words. In the context, "it was a set-up, I am innocent!", it is hyphenated.
keep up(keep on)
Pick up is two words although, depending on how it is used, it is sometimes written with a hyphen between the words like so: pick-up.