"Shoebox" is typically considered one word when referring to a small container designed to hold a pair of shoes.
"Lunchbox" is typically one word, not two separate words.
Yes, "shoelace" is a compound word because it is made up of two separate words, "shoe" and "lace", that together create a new word with a specific meaning.
"After school" is typically written as two words.
The term "in touch" is considered to be two words.
"Pogostick" is typically written as one word.
No it's two words.
"Lunchbox" is typically one word, not two separate words.
As a noun it is one word.He is a high school dropout.As a verb it is two words.One out of every two students will drop out of high school.
This is spelled shoe box - two words ("shoebox" is not in the dictionary and would be a misspelling). Although many two word-combinations end up becoming compound words rather than two separate words, some are still only used as two separate words.
The little one stopped to tie his shoe.
When talking about power distribution in regards to the electrical trade, fuse box is used as two words. Another term used is distribution panel, again two words.
-shoe -two -poo -clue -due -grew
It's actually a choice of two words: "Coffin" or "Casket".
I can't remember all the words but I do remember this much...I think :) Give me the old soft shoe...I said the old soft shoe A one...a two...a doo-dilly doo-dilly doo Give me the old soft, I said the old soft shoe It's the one my darling used to doo-dilly doo-dilly do It's the one my darling used to do
I guess it depends on the kind of shoe box. Let's take a regular shoe box with six rectangular sides. Let the dimensions be a x b x c The surface area is 2(ab + ac + bc) Intuitively, you have three different dimensions, a, b, and c. So each panel has area of ab, ac, or bc. Then if you look at opposite sides of the box, you see two opposite sides are the same, so you multiply the sum by two.
buckle my shoe
Horseshoe is just one word.