Donate SIGN UP

are the following compound words?

Avatar Image
crisgal | 17:33 Mon 02nd Apr 2012 | Phrases & Sayings
12 Answers
Teatime
lunchtime
daytime
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 12 of 12rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by crisgal. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Yes, they are a compound of two separate words -day and time, etc
Question Author
Well my son wrote them on his homework and its come back marked wrong. She says they're not!
mmmm, daytime maybe, but aren't tea time and lunch time 2 separate words?
Question Author
According to dictionary they are hyphenated, so not sure!
yeah, I've seen that as well
TBH you can find all 3 written as separate words and hyphenated! lol
I am saying nothing more than what has been said by boxtops.(nothing also being a compound word IMO.)

Ron.
Literacy standards amongst teachers today are poor.
Unfortunately not lunchime or teatime, unless dinnertime is one word, too ! But we use hyphens to separate words when one noun describes the other, so tea-time is the time for, or connected with, tea. Over time,this practice has been dying out.Old books have more hyphenated words in consequence. But daytime is one word which has lost its hyphen in this way, although it might be written day-time still.
Your son is merely ahead of his time!
The online version of Chamber's Dictionary has lunchtime and daytime as single words so they are compounds.
We are losing our hyphens but not as rapidly as the Americans are losing theirs. That reminds me of an old bugbear of mine, their word for colleague, which is coworker. Every time I see it, I read it as cow-orker, simply because no British word I can think of with the opening letters C, O, W is pronounced anything other than cow...cowage, cowal, cowan, coward, cowed and so forth.
Yes, I know there is no verb, to ork, but still, what about joint authorship where it might be said that someone co-writes with someone else? It is quite possible that some weird sect has ceremonies involving cattle and these might well be called cow-rites.
They should stick to their own motto...if it ain't broke, don't fix it...and keep co-worker.
Having said the above, The Oxford English Dictionary lists only tea-time and lunch-time WITH hyphens.
so crisgal, it would be useful for you to ask that teacher what she DOES define as compound words, what did she teach in that lesson?

1 to 12 of 12rss feed

Do you know the answer?

are the following compound words?

Answer Question >>

Related Questions