How to make a compound adjective
Put in a hyphen! (Spoiler: it should be “built-in.”)
See the difference if you don’t use a hyphen when you should?
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A Long Compound Adjective
Most compound adjectives are two words connected by a hyphen. But occasionally, more than two words are necessary. Here’s the passage:
So should we use four hyphens? You could.
Quick Separable Verb Lesson
Separable verbs don’t need hyphens.
She got the verb wrong. Should be “seek out.”
The compound adjective is good, though: “half-dollar.”
End of lesson.
Another Hyphen Lesson
First, let’s look at the comic, specifically the words “to do.” How correct are these, and why?
Okay, the answers:
- Panel 1: Let’s don’t call it a little dash. Call it a hyphen.
- Panel 2: Here “to-do” is a compound noun. The hyphen is okay. (I think she’s using “to-do’s” as an activity, not as punctuation.)
- Panel 3: Here he’s using it as a verb. Should not have a hyphen.
- Final panel: Here “to-do” is a compound adjective. Hyphen is correct.
How did you do?
Not Using a Hyphen is Important, Too
Diz assumes a hyphen, which would tie “black” and “car” together, making “black car” a compound adjective.
So remember, hyphens tie words (and parts of words) together.