The term 'bus stop' is two independent words.
The term 'bus route' is a compound noun, a word for a course regularly followed by a passenger bus; a word for a thing.
No, stop is not an adjective. Stop can be either a verb or a noun. (stop, stopped, stopped; bus stop) When used with another noun (e.g. stop sign), it is called a noun adjunct (attributive noun).
The Macarena or the Bus Stop, if I had to guess.
blues blue bus sub us
The word "were" is a verb, a form of the verb "to be."A preposition is a word that relates a noun or a pronoun to another word in the sentence.Example:We were so energetic at that age. (the verb is "were"; the preposition "at" relates the noun "age" to the adjective "energetic")They were running for the bus. (the verb is "were running"; the preposition "for" relates the noun "bus" to the verb "were running")
bus is not a compound word Stop is not a compound word Bus-stop is a compound word
No, frantic is a single word. Bus stop is a compound word it is made up of the words bus and stop bullfrog mailbox snowball
Yes, bus stop is a singular, common, concrete, compound noun, a word formed by joining two or more words to form a noun with its own meaning.
Compound words are two words combined into one. Since "airport" is made of two words-- air+port, it is a compound word.'Bus driver' is also considered a compound word, in the open form.
Yes, the name 'Barack Obama' is a compound noun.A compound noun is a word made of two or more individual words that merge to form a noun with a meaning of its own. A compound noun can be a common noun (bus stop) or a proper noun (Barack Obama).
No, kitchen is not a compound word.Compound words are made up of two words used together as one eg bus-stop, footpath, blackbird
Yes, the word 'schoolbus' is a compound noun; a word made up of two or more words that forms has a meaning of its own.
Couldn't is called a contraction it is the shortened form of could not. Bus stop is a compound word also: Together Crosswalk Moonlight Football Railroad Sunflower
no it is not
The term soccer practice can be considered a compound noun, a word formed from two separate words to form its own meaning. A compound noun does not necessarily have to be joined into a single word, a compound noun can also be hyphenated, such as mother-in-law or open such as bus stop.
Yes, the compound noun 'bus station' is a common noun, a word for any bus station anywhere.A proper noun is the name of a person, place, thing, or a title; for example:City of McAllen: Central Bus Station, McAllen, TXBristol Bus Station, Marlborough Street, Bristol, UKPudu Sentral Bus Station, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia"Bernie Magruder and the Bus Station Blow Up" by Phyllis Reynolds Naylor
There is no compound word.A compound word is a word like bus-stop.Husban is spelt like this husband