Real life without hyphen is a noun referring to actual versus fictional life. Real-life with hyphen is an adjective describing nouns. Both forms are correct in UK and US AP Style
Contains over 1100 compound nouns arranged alphabetically. Includes all three types: open, closed, and hyphenated. Words can be copied and pasted directly onto documents. List is not comprehensive and will be expanded in future
Prefixes are added before words to indicate meaning (e.g. mono-, multi-). Suffixes are added after words to show their class (e.g. -ism, -er). Conversion changes words from one class to another (e.g. email to text). Compounding combines two or more bases to create new words (e.g. backache)
Interslavic uses affixes to derive words from other words. Consonant changes occur before certain suffixes: k/c becomes č, g becomes ž, h becomes š. Suffixes starting with -o- change to -e- after soft consonants
Hyphen is a punctuation mark used to join words or parts of words. Clarifies compound adjectives and denotes joint authorship. Maintains clarity in language, distinguishing "re-cover" from "recover"