1:Motherland is a 10 letter word, used as a noun, a compound word, and has the letters adehlmnort (adehlmnort). Starts with m, ends with d, seven consonants, three vowels and three syllables.
2:Hyphenated compounds – mother-in-law, merry-go-round – not surprisingly use a hyphen between two or more words
3:Compound when applied to a human habitat refers to a cluster of buildings in an enclosure, having a shared or associated purpose, such as the houses of an extended family (e.g. the Kennedy Compound for the Kennedy family).
4:These two words are hyphenated in the dictionary as adjectives and adverbs. However, as we know, the adjective form in the dictionary is the direct adjective form, i.e., the form right in front of the noun. Predicate and appositive adjectives are not hyphenated.
5:Also called: head, heading. a phrase at the top of a newspaper or magazine article indicating the subject of the article
6: an area of land from which aircraft operate: such as. a : airport. b : air base.
7:constantly, regularly, or habitually engaged in earnest and energetic work : industrious, diligent.
8:thin, crinkled paper resembling crepe, used especially for making decorations.
Answers & Comments
Answer:
homeland
mother of one's spouse
property
freelance
front page
airport
diligent
decorative paper
head of an editorial staff
toys
Explanation:
correct me if I'm wrong
Answer:
1:Motherland is a 10 letter word, used as a noun, a compound word, and has the letters adehlmnort (adehlmnort). Starts with m, ends with d, seven consonants, three vowels and three syllables.
2:Hyphenated compounds – mother-in-law, merry-go-round – not surprisingly use a hyphen between two or more words
3:Compound when applied to a human habitat refers to a cluster of buildings in an enclosure, having a shared or associated purpose, such as the houses of an extended family (e.g. the Kennedy Compound for the Kennedy family).
4:These two words are hyphenated in the dictionary as adjectives and adverbs. However, as we know, the adjective form in the dictionary is the direct adjective form, i.e., the form right in front of the noun. Predicate and appositive adjectives are not hyphenated.
5:Also called: head, heading. a phrase at the top of a newspaper or magazine article indicating the subject of the article
6: an area of land from which aircraft operate: such as. a : airport. b : air base.
7:constantly, regularly, or habitually engaged in earnest and energetic work : industrious, diligent.
8:thin, crinkled paper resembling crepe, used especially for making decorations.
9: an editor who heads an editorial staff.
Explanation:
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