Chain, enchain, pinion
suggest, offer, raise, propose
When you take a number and a place value word and put them together. For example: 456,000 456 thousand
To yield, to surrender, to put foreward as a suggestion or to yield to the authority of...
You could say 'created' or 'put together'. you could also say "orchestrate" or "devise" and depending on which meaning of the word composed, also "supress" "soothe" "calm down" "poised", etc.
you find the surface area of a circle by first finding the area of the circles/ two ends. you do this by multiplying the diameter by pi then multiply by two, that is both ends put together then you find the area of the flat part by finding out the circumference of the circle ends, then multiply that by the height of the cylinder. circumference= pi times the diameter then add all your calculation together, and you have the surface area of your cylinder :)
An additional period is not necessary at the end of a sentence that ends in the word "inc."
collage
Multiculturalism
Yes. A compound word is made when you put two regular words together. In this case, "basket" is one word and "ball" is another. Put them together and you get "basketball." Don't thank me, thank God.
No, you do not put an extra period after "etc." since the period at the end of "etc." serves as the ending punctuation for the sentence.
Compound words are created when you take two words and put them together to form one word. An example is baseball. Take the word BASE and the word BALL and put them together to form a new word. Another example is Grandmother. Grand and Mother come together to form a new word.
yes because jelly is one word and fish is another and if you put them together you make the fish in the sea that stings people, JELLYFISH.
A word with another word put in the middle is called a compound word or a portmanteau.
No, the word 'together' is an adverb, a word that modifys a verb, an adjective, or another adverb. Examples:They came together in the same car.I put the puzzle together.The word 'together' is sometimes used informally as an adjective:She is in control, she is together.
Yes you do.
Telecasts, when any television signal is sent to another device or location.
Et cetera is abbreviated to etc. No second period is needed but you will sometimes find one anyway.