hall room - not a compound word
anteroombackroomballroombarroombathroombedroomboardroomclassroomcoatroomcheckroomcloakroomcourtroomdarkroomhomeroomguardroomgreenroomheadroomhomeroomlegroommudroommushroompoolroomcheckroomtearoomroommateshowroomsaleroomstoreroomschoolroomstockroomsickroomwardroomwashroomworkroom
compound words
Yes, into and today are compound words.
Compound words that have when in them are whence, whenever, and whensoever.
compound words written as two
anteroombackroomballroombarroombathroombedroomboardroomclassroomcoatroomcheckroomcloakroomcourtroomdarkroomhomeroomguardroomgreenroomheadroomhomeroomlegroommudroommushroompoolroomcheckroomtearoomroommateshowroomsaleroomstoreroomschoolroomstockroomsickroomwardroomwashroomworkroom
mushroom is a compound word because mush and room are words
-.-. --- -. --. .-. .- - ... / -.-- --- ..- / -.. . -.-. --- -.. . -.. / - .... .. ... -.-.-- / --- .... / .- -. -.. / -... -.-- / - .... . / .-- .- -.-- / .. / -.. --- -. .----. - / -.- -. --- .-- .-.-.- .-.-.- .-.-.-
Yes, 'waiting room' is a compound noun, an open spaced compound noun; two words joined to form a noun with its own meaning.
Yes, "living room" is a compound word made up of two separate words that combine to form a new meaning.
Waiting room is the compound noun in the question. The compound noun is waiting room.A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.
Anteroom, Atrium, Auditorium, Amphitheatre, Arena, Armoury, Assembly room. These are all words for hall beginning with A.
Yes, "living room" is a compound noun. It is made up of two separate words (living + room) that are combined to form a new noun with a distinct meaning.
Both. Bath=room= bathroom bath and room are two different words it is a compound word
reading room
No, a compound noun is a word originally constructed from two others, such as "playground". Since "cl" is not a word "class" is not a compound.
Dont say those words; go to your room! this is one here