| First part: type or purpose | Second part: what or who | Compound noun |
|---|---|---|
| police | man | policeman |
| boy | friend | boyfriend |
| fish | tank | water tank |
| dining | table | dining-table |
You have noticed that the compound noun can be written either as a single word, as a word with a hyphen, or as two words. There are no clear rules about this. A good rule of thumb is to write the most common compound nouns as one word, and the others as two words.
The elements in a compound noun are very diverse parts of speech.
| Compound elements | Examples |
|---|---|
| noun + noun | bedroom water tank motorcycle printer cartridge |
| noun + verb | rainfall haircut train-spotting |
| noun + adverb | hanger-on passer-by |
| verb + noun | washing machine driving licence swimming pool |
| verb + adverb | lookout take-off drawback |
| adverb + noun | onlooker bystander |
| adjective + verb | dry-cleaning public speaking |
| adjective + noun | greenhouse software redhead |
| adverb + verb | output overthrow upturn input |
PRONUNCIATION
Stress is important in pronunciation, as it distinguishes between a compound noun and an adjective with a noun. In compound nouns, the stress usually falls on the first syllable.
EXAMPLES
- a 'greenhouse = place where we grow plants (compound noun)
- a green 'house = house painted green (adjective and noun)
- a 'bluebird = type of bird (compound noun)
- a blue 'bird = any bird with blue feathers (adjective and noun)
- a 'greenhouse = place where we grow plants (compound noun)
- a green 'house = house painted green (adjective and noun)
- a 'bluebird = type of bird (compound noun)
- a blue 'bird = any bird with blue feathers (adjective and noun)
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