A compound noun is a noun made up of two or more words that form a noun with a meaning of its own.
There are no specific rules on forming compound nouns. Hyphens are often used to reduce confusion in a sentence. For example, the compound noun 'wire clip' is perfectly acceptable as a compound noun, but for a term like 'plastic wire-clip', the hyphen makes it more readable. The compound word is correct with or without the hyphen.
Some examples of hyphenated compound nouns are:
It simply depends on what the proper nouns in question are. For example, if it's a joined last name, like Rodriguez-Jones, then of course it's hyphenated. It has nothing to do with whether or not it's a proper noun.
Examples of traditionally hyphenated compound nouns are:blue-greenfive-year-oldjack-in-the-boxjack-in-the-pulpitmother-in-law, father-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-lawsix-packT-shirt (or tee-shirt)x-ray
No, compound nouns are not always hyphenated. Whether or not a compound noun is hyphenated depends on the specific words being combined and the style guide being followed. Some compound nouns are written as one word (e.g., "teaspoon"), while others are hyphenated (e.g., "mother-in-law") or written as separate words (e.g., "ice cream").
no, it shouldn't be hyphenated.
Note that many formerly hyphenated compound nouns have now become one word or two words without a hyphen. Many compound nouns remain, however, and the following sentences contain examples:The novel Dune described a guided weapon called a hunter-seeker.We are spending the holidays with my in-laws.I did not pack enough T-shirts for the warm weather.Jim was a real wheeler-dealer.The restaurant did not advertise but relied mainly on word-of-mouth.
no never
It simply depends on what the proper nouns in question are. For example, if it's a joined last name, like Rodriguez-Jones, then of course it's hyphenated. It has nothing to do with whether or not it's a proper noun.
Examples of traditionally hyphenated compound nouns are:blue-greenfive-year-oldjack-in-the-boxjack-in-the-pulpitmother-in-law, father-in-law, sister-in-law, brother-in-lawsix-packT-shirt (or tee-shirt)x-ray
Compound nouns are either separate words (apple juice), or hyphenated words (brother-in-law), or one word (headmaster).
Like many other words, it depends . . . If the words are used together as an adjective, they are hyphenated. "Alice bought a 90-cent picture frame." If the words are just nouns, they are not hyphenated. "Alice's picture frame cost 90 cents".
mayor- electpro- laborpasser- bycourt- martialgrant- in - aidattorney- at- lawgo- betweenmother- in- lawjack- in- the- boxsergeant- at- armsmaster- at- arms
The term 'separated noun' is used for the open spaced compound noun. There are three types of compound nouns, closed, hyphenated, and open spaced (separated). Examples: open spaced (separated): tennis shoe, front door, paint brush hyphenated: mother-in-law, fifty-five, six-pack closed: bathtub, baseball, houseboat
Yes. In most sentence diagrams, the hyphenated words (nouns, adjectives, adverbs) are considered one word. There are "flow diagrams" where adverb-adjectives may be diagrammed consecutively (e.g. deep-blue, hard-hitting).
The plural form for hyphenated compound nouns varies, depending on the type of word it is; for example:I have two daughters-in-law.We bought two T-shirts (tee-shirts).It was found by two passers-by.He does voice-overs for commercials.
No. The term "twelve year old" is a noun (someone who is 12). It can be an adjective, but should be hyphenated, as in twelve-year-old cat. *The Chicago Manual of Style suggests that both nouns and adjectives should be hyphenated. Other styles may differ.
Compound nouns can be written: As one word: policeman As a hyphenated word: six-pack As two separate words: fast ball
It is not hyphenated.