Asked by: Linda Kunde
Score: 4.4/5
(69 votes)
a room in which a class is conducted or pupils are taught.
Is school mates one word?
Word forms: schoolmates
He started the magazine with a schoolmate.
Is Homeroom a proper noun?
What type of word is ‘homeroom’? Homeroom is a noun — Word Type.
Is class time one word or two?
Usage notes
Still most commonly encountered as two separate words, rather than in its hyphenate or compounded form.
Is home working one word or two?
Homeworking is the activity of doing paid work from home, especially when you usually travel to work.
24 related questions found
Is coversheet one word or two?
An extra sheet attached to the front of a document. When handing in your assignment, ensure you include a coversheet with your name and student number.
Is Living Room 2 words?
But there are many compound words that are not spelled as one word, but that are spelled with a hyphen. … So bathroom is one word; but living room is written as two words.
What is a class hour?
Class hour or «contact hour» means approximately one hour of direct communication between a teacher and one or more students, minus time for rest or change of classes. … Class hour means 60 minutes, of which at least 50 minutes are instruction attended by the student.
Is homeroom capitalized?
In general you only capitalize proper nouns, which names a unique and specific thing. So, none of the words that you listed would be capitalized. Homeroom is one word. Boys room and girls room would not need to have an apostrophe.
What does homeroom mean?
: a classroom where pupils report especially at the beginning of each school day.
What’s another word for classmate?
In this page you can discover 9 synonyms, antonyms, idiomatic expressions, and related words for classmate, like: schoolmate, , schoolfellow, class fellow, colleague, , girl-friend, co-worker and workmates.
What are school mates called?
A person who was a fellow attendee at one’s school. comrade. classmate. friend.
What do you call a former college classmate?
Alumni, as far as I know, are people who are former students or graduates, as they’re more commonly called, of a particular university.
What do you do in homeroom?
Students are expected to take on tasks for their homeroom including cleaning, leading morning prayer, leading classroom organization, homework and handling homework and assignments. The homeroom period may also be used for reading and writing after main activities have been fulfilled.
What does dispersing mean?
1 : to break up in random fashion the crowd dispersed on request. 2a : to become dispersed the particles dispersed throughout the mixture. b : dissipate, vanish the fog dispersed toward morning.
Why is homeroom important?
Your homeroom is your main connection and point of contact at school. You should feel welcome, safe and cared for in your homeroom (as in every classroom), but your homeroom allows you a space to ask questions that you may not have the opportunity to ask in other classes.
What are clock hours?
Clock hours are the total number of actual hours per week a student spends attending class or other instructional activities that count toward completing a program of study.
How long is a semester?
A semester system divides the academic year into two sessions: fall and spring. Each session is approximately 15 weeks long, with a winter break between the fall and spring sessions and a summer break after the spring session.
What are teacher clock hours?
«Clock hour» means an hour of actual instruction, or planned group or individual professional development activity as approved by the local continuing education/relicensure committee.
Why is living room two words but bedroom is one?
Senior Member. Maybe because bed and bath are both nouns, whereas dining and living are both forms of a verb. If you had sleeping room (using verb to sleep) instead of bedroom it would be 2 words.
Is birthday a compound word?
The word ‘birthday’ is a compound word. This word is the combination of the words ‘birth’ and ‘day. ‘ Since both ‘birth’ and ‘day’ function as base…
What is compound word examples?
Compound words are formed when two or more words are joined together to create a new word that has an entirely new meaning. … For example, “sun” and “flower” are two different words, but when fused together, they form another word, Sunflower.
Is sitewide one word?
Adverb. Throughout a site (either a physical place or a website).
Is Backstock one word?
Stock remaining that has not yet been sold.
October 16, 2007 at 8:45 pm
Over at the HSA website, there’s a discussion going on over whether it’s more accurate to spell “homeschool” as one word or as two (home schooled). I personally prefer for it to remain one word, and gave my thoughts on the matter. Here’s my two cents on the matter, if you’d like some spare change…
Back in the day, when this was the big discussion amongst the state organizations, I gave it a little thought and decided that I prefer “homeschool” as one word. My reasoning is that homeschooling is a lifestyle choice, not simply school at home. If the purpose of homeschooling were to duplicate school at home, then two words would work well “home schooled” = “schooled at home.” But since school/learning/education is something that most of us incorporate into our daily lives, merging the academic with the art of living, which is done from the center, the heart, of the family – the home – separating the idea into two distinct words seems to argue against the whole meaning of the decision to keep our children at home. Perhaps the creation of a new word would capture this mindset more accurately but, since we have a set line-up of words and phrases to choose from (home school, homeschool, home educate, etc.), “homeschool” seems, to me, the best expression of this home and family-centered lifestyle.
(And, according to the dictionary, it’s accurate. )
So, there you have my thoughts on it. What about you? Do you prefer “home educate,” “home school” or “homeschool”? Or perhaps something different all together?
Entry filed under: Devotions and Thoughts, Homeschool, Life.
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There are some rules for joining two different words into one, but they do not cover all cases
AREAS OF UNCERTAINTY ABOUT JOINING WORDS TOGETHER
Is it correct to write bath tub, or should it be the single word bathtub? Is every day a correct spelling, or everyday? Uncertainties like this are widespread in English, even among proficient users. They are made worse by the fact that in some cases both spellings are correct, but mean different things.
Are there any guidelines for resolving such uncertainties? It seems that in some cases there are and in some there are not. I wish here to indicate some of these guidelines. They mostly involve combinations that can make either one word or two, depending on meaning or grammar.
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ORDINARY COMPOUNDS
Ordinary compounds are the area with the fewest guidelines. They include words like coursework, which I like to write as a single word but my Microsoft Word spellchecker tells me should be two. As a linguist, I usually disregard computer advice about language (see 68. How Computers Get Grammar Wrong), but the question of why ordinary compound words give especial problems is interesting. First, these words need to be defined.
One can think of a compound as two or more words joined together. Linguists, though, like to speak of joined roots or stems rather than words, partly because the joining into a compound stops them being words (a few are not even words by themselves, e.g. horti- in horticulture).
Another problem with “joined words” is that some, such as fearless, are not considered compounds at all. The -less ending is called not a “root” but an “affix”, a meaningful word part added to a root to modify its meaning. Most affixes (some named suffixes, e.g. -less, -ness, -tion, -ly, -ing; some prefixes, e.g. -un-, in-, mis-, pre-) cannot be separate words, but a few like -less can (see 106. Word-Like Suffixes and 146. Some Important Prefix Types). Thus, words like fearless, unhappy and international are not compounds because they have fewer than two roots. Other compounds are swimsuit, homework and eavesdrop.
Suggestions for recognising a compound are not always very helpful. The frequency of words occurring together is no guide because it ignores the fact that many frequent combinations are not compounds (e.g. town hall and open air). The grammatical classes of the words and the closeness of the link between them are sometimes mentioned, but are unreliable. The age of a combination is also suggested, the claim being that compounds originate as two separate words, and gradually evolve through constant use first into hyphenated expressions (like fire-eater or speed-read – see 223. Uses of Hyphens), and eventually into compounds. However, some quite recent words are already compounds, such as bitmap in computing.
Much more useful is the way compounds are pronounced. Single English words generally contain one syllable that is pronounced more strongly than the others (see 125. Stress and Emphasis). This means compounds should have just one strong syllable, while non-compounds should have more. The rule applies fairly universally (see 243. Pronunciation Secrets, #3). For example, home is the only strong syllable in homework, but one of two in home rule. I write coursework as one word because course- is stronger than work.
The only problem with this approach is that you have to know pronunciations before you start, which is not always the case if English is not your mother tongue. The only other resort is a dictionary or spellcheck!
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NOUNS DERIVED FROM PHRASAL VERBS
Happily, some compound words have some other helpful features. Most are words whose roots, if written as two words, are also correct but have different meaning and grammar, so that the meaning indicates the spelling or vice versa. A particularly large category of such words is illustrated by the compound noun giveaway (= “obvious clue”). If its two roots are written separately as give away, they become a “phrasal” verb – a combination of a simple English verb (give) with a small adverb (away) – meaning “unintentionally reveal” (see 244. Special Uses of GIVE, #12).
There are many other nouns that can become phrasal verbs, e.g. takeover, takeaway, makeup, cutoff, breakout, setdown, pickup, washout, login and stopover. In writing there is always a need to remember that, if the two “words” are going to act as a verb, they must be spelled separately, but if they are going to act as a noun, they must be written together.
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OTHER CHOICES THAT DEPEND ON WORD CLASS
In the examples above, it is the choice between noun and verb uses that determines the spelling. Other grammatical choices can have this effect too. The two alternative spellings mentioned earlier, every day and everyday, are an example. The first (with ev- and day said equally strongly) acts in sentences like a noun or adverb, the second (with ev- the strongest) like an adjective. Compare:
(a) NOUN: Every day is different.
(b) ADVERB: Dentists recommend cleaning your teeth every day.
(c) ADJECTIVE: Everyday necessities are expensive.
In (a), every day is noun-like because it is the subject of the verb is (for details of subjects, see 12. Singular and Plural Verb Choices). In (b), the same words act like an adverb, because they give more information about a verb (cleaning) and could easily be replaced by a more familiar adverb like regularly or thoroughly (see 120. Six Things to Know about Adverbs). In (c), the single word everyday appears before a noun (necessities), giving information about it just as any adjective might (see 109. Placing an Adjective after its Noun). It is easily replaced by a more recognizable adjective like regular or daily. For more about every, see 169. “All”, “Each” and “Every”.
Another example of a noun/adverb contrast is any more (as in …cannot pay any more) versus anymore (…cannot pay anymore). In the first, any more is the object of pay and means “more than this amount”, while in the second anymore is not the object of pay (we have to understand something like money instead), and has the adverb meaning “for a longer time”.
A further adverb/adjective contrast is on board versus onboard. I once saw an aeroplane advertisement wrongly saying *available onboard – using an adjective to do an adverb job. The adverb on board is needed because it “describes” an adjective (available). The adjective form cannot be used because there is no noun to describe (see 6. Adjectives with no Noun 1). A correct adjective use would be onboard availability.
Slightly different is alright versus all right. The single word is either an adjective meaning “acceptable” or “undamaged”, as in The system is alright, or an adverb meaning “acceptably”, as in The system works alright. The two words all right, on the other hand, are only an adjective, different in meaning from the adjective alright: they mean “100% correct”. Thus, Your answers are all right means that there are no wrong answers, whereas Your answers are alright means that the answers are acceptable, without indicating how many are right.
Consider also upstairs and up stairs. The single word could be either an adjective (the upstairs room) or an adverb (go upstairs) or a noun (the upstairs). It refers essentially to “the floor above”, without necessarily implying the presence of stairs at all – one could, for example, go upstairs in a lift (see 154. Lone Prepositions after BE). The separated words, by contrast, act only like an adverb and do mean literally “by using stairs” (see 218. Tricky Word Contrasts 8, #3).
The pair may be and maybe illustrates a verb and adverb use:
(d) VERB: Food prices may be higher.
(e) ADVERB: Food prices are maybe higher.
In (e), the verb is are. The adverb maybe, which modifies its meaning, could be replaced by perhaps or possibly. Indeed, in formal writing it should be so replaced because maybe is conversational (see 108. Formal and Informal Words).
My final example is some times and sometimes, noun and adverb:
(f) NOUN: Some times are harder than others.
(g) ADVERB: Sometimes life is harder than at other times.
Again, replacement is a useful separation strategy. The noun times, the subject of are in (f), can be replaced by a more familiar noun like days without radically altering the sentence, while the adverb sometimes in (g) corresponds to occasionally, the subject of is being the noun life.
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USES INVOLVING “some”, “any”, “every” AND “no”
The words some, any, every and no generally do not make compounds, but can go before practically any noun to make a “noun phrase”. In a few cases, however, this trend is broken and these words must combine with the word after them to form a compound. Occasionally there is even a choice between using one word or two, depending on meaning.
The compulsory some compounds are somehow, somewhere and somewhat; the any compounds are anyhow and anywhere, while every and no make everywhere and nowhere. There is a simple observation that may help these compounds to be remembered: the part after some/any/every/no is not a noun, as is usually required, but a question word instead. The rule is thus that if a combination starting with some, any, every or no lacks a noun, a single word must be written.
The combinations that can be one word or two depending on meaning are someone, somebody, something, sometime, sometimes, anyone, anybody, anything, anyway (Americans might add anytime and anyplace), everyone, everybody, everything, everyday, no-one, nobody and nothing. The endings in these words (-one, -body, -thing, -way, -time, -place and –day) are noun-like and mean the same as question words (who? what/which? how? when? and where? – see 185. Noun Synonyms of Question Words).
Some (tentative) meaning differences associated with these alternative spellings are as follows:
SOME TIME = “an amount of time”
Please give me some time.
SOMETIME (adj.) = “past; old; erstwhile”
I met a sometime colleague
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SOMETHING = “an object whose exact nature is unimportant”.
SOME THING = “a nasty creature whose exact nature is unknown” (see 260. Formal Written Uses of “Thing”, #2).
Some thing was lurking in the water.
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ANYONE/ANYBODY = “one or more people; it is unimportant who”
Anyone can come = Whoever wants to come is welcome; Choose anyone = Choose whoever you want – one or more people.
ANY ONE = “any single person/thing out of a group of possibilities”.
Any one can come = Only one person/thing (freely chosen) can come; Choose any one = Choose whoever/whichever you want, but only one.
ANY BODY = “any single body belonging to a living or dead creature”.
Any body is suitable = I will accept whatever body is available.
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ANYTHING = “whatever (non-human) is conceivable/possible, without limit”.
Bring anything you like = There is no limit in what you can bring; Anything can happen = There is no limit on possible happenings.
ANY THING = “any single non-human entity in a set”.
Choose any thing = Freely choose one of the things in front of you.
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EVERYONE/EVERYBODY = “all people” (see 169. “All”, “Each” and “Every” and 211.General Words for People).
Everyone/Everybody is welcome.
EVERY ONE = “all members of a previously-mentioned group of at least three things (not people)”.
Diamonds are popular. Every one sells easily.
EVERY BODY = “all individual bodies without exceptions”.
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EVERYTHING = “all things/aspects/ideas”.
Everything is clear.
EVERY THING = “all individual objects, emphasising lack of exceptions”.
Every thing on display was a gift.
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NO-ONE/NOBODY = “no people”
No-one/Nobody came.
NO ONE = “not a single” (+ noun)
No one answer is right.
NO BODY = “no individual body”.
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NOTHING = “zero”.
Nothing is impossible.
NO THING = “no individual object”.
There are other problem combinations besides those discussed here; hopefully these examples will make them easier to deal with.