AOL: 56 no-carve pumpkin ideas that are better than the real deal
Yahoo: 45 No-Carve Pumpkin Ideas Are Easy to Recreate, No Knife Required
Today: 60 no-carve pumpkin decorating ideas that are better than the real deal
60 no-carve pumpkin decorating ideas that are better than the real deal
MSN: 31 No-Carve Halloween Pumpkin Painting Ideas for Safer Jack O' Lanterns
No-carve pumpkin ideas for safe pumpkin decorating, from pumpkin painting to mess-free, stress-free pumpkin primping. Maybe the gourd’s guts gross your kids out, or you’re avoiding the knives and ...
Does "non-" prefixed to a two word phrase permit another hyphen before the second word? If I want to refer to an entity which is defined as the negation of another entity by attaching "non-" it se...
Using "non-" to prefix a two-word phrase - English Language & Usage ...
"Non-" is defined as "a prefix meaning 'not,' freely used as an English formative, usually with a simple negative force as implying mere negation or absence of something (rather than the opposite or reverse of it, as often expressed by un-).
prefixes - When is the prefix non- used vs un-? - English Language ...
At the linguistics conference, there were no / not / non- native speakers of Esperanto. They're all grammatically "valid", but they all mean different things - and pragmatically / idiomatically, only the no version is likely to be used.
Except "non" is not an English word, it is a prefix of Latin origin. Which is why American style manuals will always ask you to merge it with the subsequent word, without a hyphen. British rules differ, and the "non-" construction is frequently found in the literature. In any case, an isolated "non" is definitely wrong, in any flavo [u]r of the English language.