Yes, "background" is a compound word, consisting of the words "back" and "ground" combined to form a single word with its own meaning.
The compound word in the sentence is "sister-in-law."
The compound noun is Middle English.
The compound word for "not far away" is nearby, and the compound word for "at the side of" is alongside.
No, "whereas" is not a compound word. It is a single word used to contrast two different parts of a sentence.
There is no compound word.A compound word is a word like bus-stop.Husban is spelt like this husband
Yes, the word background is a noun, a singular, common, compound noun; a word for the scenery behind a main feature or activity, a thing. Example sentence: The background of the story is Brooklyn during the depression. In the background of the portrait there was a mansion set on a hill.
Yes, "background" is a compound word, consisting of the words "back" and "ground" combined to form a single word with its own meaning.
This sentence is precise. + It is also a compound sentence.= This sentence is precise and it is a compound sentence.
A sentence with a compound word is, He was excited about signing up to play football.
An open compound word is made up of two separate words, such as "high school" or "ice cream."
A compound sentence is a sentence that contains at least two complete sentences joined by a conjunction (and, but, or) or semicolon (;). The word its is a possessive pronoun. Any sentence that contains the word its can be made into a compound sentence by connecting another sentence to it correctly. "My dog's name is Rover and its fur is brown."
a compound sentence having a word bewilder?
The compound word in the sentence is "sister-in-law."
The compound noun is Middle English.
The compound word for "not far away" is nearby, and the compound word for "at the side of" is alongside.
a complex compound word involves using multiple hard compound words in a sentence.