That's an easy one two words.
it is one word/everything It can be one word when you are talking about the collective noun "everything" ... all things. It could also be two separate words if you were talking about "things" as separate from people or places. Or maybe if you were talking about Thing One and Thing Two from Cat in the Hat. In that case, you would be referring just to the "things" and not "everything," so it would be two words.
No. It may also be redundant, since "you" already addresses the guys you are talking to. If you were talking to a subset of the group, you might say, for example you two or you three.
Hipbone is one word.
"Hardworking" is one word.
"Doorway" is one word.
There are two main way to find out if someone is talking in their sleep. The first is to record a night of sleep and the other is to sleep next to someone and ask them to listen to you sleep.
yes, Sleepwalking is one word
i think it one word
it is one word/everything It can be one word when you are talking about the collective noun "everything" ... all things. It could also be two separate words if you were talking about "things" as separate from people or places. Or maybe if you were talking about Thing One and Thing Two from Cat in the Hat. In that case, you would be referring just to the "things" and not "everything," so it would be two words.
Apart is one word meaning separate or distinct (from something else). It is two words when you are talking about a part in your hair or a part of your body.
It depends how you are trying to use if your intended meaning is whatever or changing the subject then it is one word. But if you are talking about different ways it is two words.
Yes, unless you are talking about someone's birthday and it is one word.
Two
The type of sailboat that changes two vowels from the word "sleep" is a sloop. In the word "sleep," the two vowels that are changed are "e" and "e," which are replaced with "o" in the word "sloop." A sloop is a type of sailboat with a single mast and a fore-and-aft rig.
Two governors' is the one that is correct. why? Because you are talking about the possession of two governors. "Governor's" is used when you are only talking about the possession of one, not two.
its a sleep apnea where one can be obstrucitive sleep apnea and a complex of the two of the two can have this when even awake
If you mean the number "one" it is "ett", however if you are talking about saying e.g. "one table", then it depends on the word as there are two different options depending on what word it is (as the Swedish language have two different articles, comparing to English that only has one, "the"). The options you have for nouns are "en" or "ett".