0
Believer Posted 19 years ago
Grammar

"well-known"--anomaly?

0Hi,02br
02br
00Normally, I think, a person would think that when you have an adverb other than those ending in "-ly" form before a participle acting as an adjective and placed after the verb, one would opt for non-hyphenation. OK. How about this phrase 'well-known'? It seems to fit the notion indicated but seems to remain the same in both situations -- before a noun and after a verb? Is it only exception? 0-
  

Top answer

02br 02br 00For this kind of query, it's much, much better if you supply examples of what you are talking about. 05002br 02br 00Best wishes, Clive010id1

  • 02br 02br 00For this kind of query, it's much, much better if you supply examples of what you are talking about.
  • 05002br 02br 00Best wishes, Clive010id1
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
0Hi,02br
02br
00What makes you think that 'well-known' is an adverb?02br
02br
00For this kind of query, it's much, much better if you supply examples of what you are talking about. 05002br
02br
00Best wishes, Clive010id1

Related Questions