i dont have my thesaurus at hand right now, but is there perhaps a better option for the word upcoming? as in "a young and upcoming firm..." thanks!
Seventeen answers:
2007-10-09 07:03:33 UTC
one word.
But wouldn't it be worded up and coming firm ???
?
2016-05-20 02:30:12 UTC
The minor children's names go on the inside envelope not the outside. The outside put. Mr. John Doe and Mrs. Jane thomas-doe. 123 First Avenue South or 123 First Avenue S
steffi
2007-10-09 07:12:05 UTC
Upcoming is not hyphenated. How about rising or growing as alternatives?
Steve C
2007-10-09 07:09:44 UTC
Upcoming is not hyphenated, but doesn't really mean what you want here. It means 'coming soon' or 'approaching.' You might want, as someone suggested, "up and coming" which means successful, promising or gaining prominence.
Dana A
2007-10-09 07:10:22 UTC
It should be "up-and-coming" firm. As opposed to an "upcoming" date. I think hyphenation is proper.
skaizun
2007-10-09 07:10:46 UTC
"Upcoming" is one word; no hyphen.
The web is chock full of thesauruses (thesauri?).
Just enter "thesaurus" into your favorite search engine.
Since you didn't indicate the company name or product/service, I'll pretend it's a one-man operation started by a high school kid, so I would have written, "an electrodynamic and funky fresh company..." ;)
Sally Anne
2007-10-09 09:44:55 UTC
'a young and enterprising firm'
'a young and dynamic firm'
'a young and visionary firm'
upcoming does not have a hyphen.
2007-10-09 07:06:32 UTC
No it is not hyphenated.
Try, "a young and favourable firm".
LeGuy
2007-10-09 07:03:56 UTC
Nopesiree...this is going to be a tough best answer for you to pick, huh? Lol
rosie recipe
2007-10-09 07:53:38 UTC
no, I've never seen it with hyphen
2007-10-09 07:05:37 UTC
No. You didn't. And rightly so - the same as 'upward' as in 'mobile'.