Yes, unless you mean that the car salesman is a small person.
Yes, you can use a hyphen in a three-syllable word to separate its component parts or to indicate a compound adjective.
You say "A hyphen" because the sound of the letter "H" at the beginning of the word "hyphen" is pronounced, making it a consonant sound.
Yes, if "easy-to-use" is describing something else. An example would be "Answers.com is an easy-to-use tool for gathering knowledge."
No, deworming is not spelled with a hyphen.
No, decision making does not have a hyphen. It is considered a compound noun that is used without a hyphen.
The dictionaries that list it use a hyphen.
No, excitingly is one word so you would not use a hyphen in it.
You do not use a hyphen when writing square feet. Using a hyphen would make it one word which should not be the case.
It isn't in the dictionary, so it'd be best to use a hyphen.
no
Yes, whenver using square-foot you should use a hyphen
It's not a word in the dictionary, so yes, use the hyphen.
In a range name instead of using a space or hyphen, use a?
A hyphen is a "dash" that we use to put a compound word together. Such as 24-hour clock or 42-foot.
Yes, you should use a hyphen in "district-wide" when it functions as a compound adjective before a noun, such as in "district-wide policies." However, if it comes after the noun, you typically do not use a hyphen, as in "the policies are district wide."
No, "reenroll" does not have a hyphen. It is written as a single word without a hyphen, following the common practice of combining prefixes with verbs. Similarly, other words like "rebuild" and "rethink" also do not use a hyphen.
After a prefix and before a suffix