No, they are two separate words.
It is a compound word although it is also one word.
A compound word is two separate words made into one. Actually, there was a compound word in that sentence right there! Examples: Into, behind, lifetime, elsewhere, somewhere, fireworks.
YES!!! Because both 'air' and 'ball' are stand alone words in their own right.
Yes it is - Although it is a complete word in it's own right, as with any compound word it is constructed from other 'complete' words - 'Some' & 'time' are simple words in their own right - these words combine to give the new word 'sometime'
Upwards is a compound word.
It is a compound word although it is also one word.
upper right upper lip
That's right, Englishmen is a compound word because it is made up of two words, English and men.
Yes, right of way, or right-of-way is a compound noun; three words combined to form a word with its own meaning.
One word, you got it right.
A compound word is two separate words made into one. Actually, there was a compound word in that sentence right there! Examples: Into, behind, lifetime, elsewhere, somewhere, fireworks.
YES!!! Because both 'air' and 'ball' are stand alone words in their own right.
Up
Yes it is - Although it is a complete word in it's own right, as with any compound word it is constructed from other 'complete' words - 'Some' & 'time' are simple words in their own right - these words combine to give the new word 'sometime'
Yes, the word 'right-of-way' is a compound noun, a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.The noun 'right-of-way' is a word for a legal right to pass over another person's land; the right of certain traffic to go ahead of other traffic; a word for a thing.
No, building is not a compound word.
The contraction (not a compound word) is doesn't.