Yes, it's a kenning. I.e. "The house was far-removed from the rest of town..."
However if you're trying to be poetic then you could say "the house was far removed" where far describes removed. If you throw a comma in there ("the house was far, removed from...") then you have another meaning, too.
If "far removed" is supposed to describe something, then it has a hyphen. If it's not supposed to be an adjective like red, big or happy then no.
You do not need to hyphenate.
You do not hyphenate the number.
Don't hyphenate; ongoing is one word.
You hyphenate it only at the hyphen.
I think it's more accepted to hyphenate it.
Can you, or should you? You can hyphenate it if you're moving between lines in a paragraph and need to break up the word. You shouldn't hyphenate it normally.
You would hyphenate "thank you" when it is used as an adjective before a noun, such as in "a thank-you card."
You mean at the end of a line? Well it depends on how much room you have hyphenate at a syllable is probably best. If you have little space before the end of the line don't hyphenate a word. You could hyphenate like this trans- portation.
No...
You can hyphenate 3 bedroom when it is used in a list. It is usually not hyphenated when it is used by itself.
You can hyphenate the word improvement like this: im-prove-ment.
You do not generally hyphenate the word stepchild, because it is not a hyphenated word. If the question is where to hyphenate stepchild if you have to break it across two lines, it is not difficult to determine this, because the two syllables are actually separate words: step and child. If you have to hyphenate the word to break it, you would put step- on one line and child on the next. If the word is all on one line, you do not hyphenate it.