A building that is part of a local court of law would most often be written as courthouse, at least in the UK. Court house can also be used and is correct, although I think this tends to imply that is more likely to be a building with a name as part of the address (such as Rose Cottage, Ivy House, etc).
Half court is two words.
in-house - two words, hyphenated.
A building that is part of a local court of law would most often be written as courthouse, at least in the UK. Court house can also be used and is correct, although I think this tends to imply that is more likely to be a building with a name as part of the address (such as Rose Cottage, Ivy House, etc).
No, it's two words: haunted house
It's simply hyphenated. Court-martialed
it's two separate words: tea house.
The words, "house," "star," and "street" all have the word, "light" in common. For example, you can have a "houselight," "starlight," and "streetlight."
A house after set up
The spelling is one word "courthouse" when referring to the building. (Some place names will use the two-word form.)
Homemade is one word and means something made at home. Housemaid is a female domestic worker. "Housemade" is not a word (that is, it does not appear in dictionaries). However, some restaurants use "house-made" to refer to items made on the premises, such as house-made pickles. They sometimes spell it as one word or two words, but it should be hyphenated.
The word court has one syllable.
They have in common the word light. The common words are lighthouse, starlight and streetlight.