Yes, "newsstand" is a compound word. It is formed by combining "news" and "stand" to create a single word with a specific meaning.
A compound word is made when two words are joined to form a new word. Example: newsstand= newsstand.
No, the word frozen is an adjective and yogurt is the subject; a compound word is a new word made by two words, such as paperclip or newsstand.
You might buy the Sunday Times at a newsstand, drugstore or the supermarket.(The original version of this question specified a word with the vowel sound of the word "moon" which is the long OO heard in "news" and "newsstand.")
kiosk
kiosk and i am in 5 grade if u care.
kiosk i am in fith grade and yes i am smart
CNN NewsStand was created in 1997.
A compound word is a word that is composed of two or more separate words that are combined to make a new word. For example, combine dragon and fly to make the word dragonfly which has a completely different meaning than either of the original words. One takes a root word, like the example "fly" and adds a descriptive word such as "dragon" to get dragonfly. In a related question, "treetop" applied. A word with two parts (for example, butterfly is a compound word because is has butter and then fly) others could be: paperclip, newsstand, newspaper, eyelid, bedrock, ladybug, pigtail, pigpen, flowerpot, handbag, bedtime, handshake, ect.
Newsstand - application - was created on 2011-10-12.
It is kiosk
No, building is not a compound word.
The contraction (not a compound word) is doesn't.