No, "sign off" is not hyphenated when used as a verb. However, it can be hyphenated when used as a noun (e.g., "She gave her sign-off on the project").
Yes, "pre-school" is a hyphenated word.
The past tense of "sign off" is "signed off."
Conditional sign off involves approving a task with specific conditions that need to be met before final approval can be given, while provisional sign off is a temporary approval subject to further review or testing. Both types of sign off help ensure that projects meet requirements and standards before they are considered complete.
Yes, the term "postbaccalaureate" is typically written as one word without a hyphen.
Snagglepuss's sign off catchphrase is "Exit, stage left!" He uses this phrase to indicate that he is leaving the scene or situation.
The words "off duty" are hyphenated as "off-duty" when used as a compound adjective before a noun, such as in "an off-duty officer." However, when used as a predicate or after a noun, they remain separate, as in "The officer was off duty."
No.
Yes, "highly-regulated" is hyphenated.
The term 'hypenated' is not biblical.
No, it is never hypenated
Eye-catching is hyphenated.
you click the sign off button
Yes, "pre-school" is a hyphenated word.
at-risk is hypenated because the pronoun at cannot stand alone.
The past tense of "sign off" is "signed off."
In employment: To start work, to end work.In unemployment (UK): To sign on to benefits, to sign off benefits.In computing: Log in and Log off
Nonmetal is typically written as one word.