When do we add a hyphen (-) to a complex adjective word?Is There A Hyphen Limit When Hyphenating Words?“At risk”, or “at-risk”? What's the difference?Is there a hyphen before “hundred” when used in adjective form?May “self-taught” and “self-study” be written without hyphen?Do I need hyphen in this context?How to avoid ambiguity in the sentence“This is a little used car”?Hyphen in “fine-grained” when it follows a nounA question about using a hyphenA question pertaining to using a hyphenUsing a hyphen in double figures

What options are left, if Britain cannot decide?

Can a druid choose the size of its wild shape beast?

Professor being mistaken for a grad student

Did Ender ever learn that he killed Stilson and/or Bonzo?

A sequence that has integer values for prime indexes only:

Are all passive ability checks floors for active ability checks?

It's a yearly task, alright

Could the Saturn V actually have launched astronauts around Venus?

What are substitutions for coconut in curry?

How to simplify this time periods definition interface?

How to change two letters closest to a string and one letter immediately after a string using notepad++

If curse and magic is two sides of the same coin, why the former is forbidden?

Have researchers managed to "reverse time"? If so, what does that mean for physics?

Look at your watch and tell me what time is it. vs Look at your watch and tell me what time it is

What is the significance behind "40 days" that often appears in the Bible?

Time travel from stationary position?

Co-worker team leader wants to inject his friend's awful software into our development. What should I say to our common boss?

Gantt Chart like rectangles with log scale

Opacity of an object in 2.8

What do Xenomorphs eat in the Alien series?

Does Mathematica reuse previous computations?

Do the common programs (for example: "ls", "cat") in Linux and BSD come from the same source code?

How Could an Airship Be Repaired Mid-Flight

Do I need life insurance if I can cover my own funeral costs?



When do we add a hyphen (-) to a complex adjective word?


Is There A Hyphen Limit When Hyphenating Words?“At risk”, or “at-risk”? What's the difference?Is there a hyphen before “hundred” when used in adjective form?May “self-taught” and “self-study” be written without hyphen?Do I need hyphen in this context?How to avoid ambiguity in the sentence“This is a little used car”?Hyphen in “fine-grained” when it follows a nounA question about using a hyphenA question pertaining to using a hyphenUsing a hyphen in double figures













8















When do we add a hyphen (-) to a complex adjective word?



Here are a few examples:




This is an Xbox-compatible game.



This is a Creation-Kit-compatible 3d asset.



This is a SkyRe-compatible Skyrim mod.




More often than not all these examples are used without a hyphen or hyphens. Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?










share|improve this question
























  • The hyphen is used to indicate that it is a morphological compound word consisting of two bases, as opposed to a syntactic construction consisting of head+modifier.

    – BillJ
    19 hours ago






  • 1





    My employer couldn't read my signature, so I re-signed the contract. Afterwards, I resigned.

    – Strawberry
    10 hours ago











  • Robusto's and fred2's answers don't address a situation which often causes doubt as to whether to write a hyphenated word or two separate words, namely, where the second is an adjective, and the first is an adverb modifying it. This answer to another question might help.

    – Rosie F
    7 hours ago















8















When do we add a hyphen (-) to a complex adjective word?



Here are a few examples:




This is an Xbox-compatible game.



This is a Creation-Kit-compatible 3d asset.



This is a SkyRe-compatible Skyrim mod.




More often than not all these examples are used without a hyphen or hyphens. Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?










share|improve this question
























  • The hyphen is used to indicate that it is a morphological compound word consisting of two bases, as opposed to a syntactic construction consisting of head+modifier.

    – BillJ
    19 hours ago






  • 1





    My employer couldn't read my signature, so I re-signed the contract. Afterwards, I resigned.

    – Strawberry
    10 hours ago











  • Robusto's and fred2's answers don't address a situation which often causes doubt as to whether to write a hyphenated word or two separate words, namely, where the second is an adjective, and the first is an adverb modifying it. This answer to another question might help.

    – Rosie F
    7 hours ago













8












8








8


1






When do we add a hyphen (-) to a complex adjective word?



Here are a few examples:




This is an Xbox-compatible game.



This is a Creation-Kit-compatible 3d asset.



This is a SkyRe-compatible Skyrim mod.




More often than not all these examples are used without a hyphen or hyphens. Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?










share|improve this question
















When do we add a hyphen (-) to a complex adjective word?



Here are a few examples:




This is an Xbox-compatible game.



This is a Creation-Kit-compatible 3d asset.



This is a SkyRe-compatible Skyrim mod.




More often than not all these examples are used without a hyphen or hyphens. Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?







hyphens






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 10 hours ago









psmears

40739




40739










asked yesterday









repomonsterrepomonster

1,051116




1,051116












  • The hyphen is used to indicate that it is a morphological compound word consisting of two bases, as opposed to a syntactic construction consisting of head+modifier.

    – BillJ
    19 hours ago






  • 1





    My employer couldn't read my signature, so I re-signed the contract. Afterwards, I resigned.

    – Strawberry
    10 hours ago











  • Robusto's and fred2's answers don't address a situation which often causes doubt as to whether to write a hyphenated word or two separate words, namely, where the second is an adjective, and the first is an adverb modifying it. This answer to another question might help.

    – Rosie F
    7 hours ago

















  • The hyphen is used to indicate that it is a morphological compound word consisting of two bases, as opposed to a syntactic construction consisting of head+modifier.

    – BillJ
    19 hours ago






  • 1





    My employer couldn't read my signature, so I re-signed the contract. Afterwards, I resigned.

    – Strawberry
    10 hours ago











  • Robusto's and fred2's answers don't address a situation which often causes doubt as to whether to write a hyphenated word or two separate words, namely, where the second is an adjective, and the first is an adverb modifying it. This answer to another question might help.

    – Rosie F
    7 hours ago
















The hyphen is used to indicate that it is a morphological compound word consisting of two bases, as opposed to a syntactic construction consisting of head+modifier.

– BillJ
19 hours ago





The hyphen is used to indicate that it is a morphological compound word consisting of two bases, as opposed to a syntactic construction consisting of head+modifier.

– BillJ
19 hours ago




1




1





My employer couldn't read my signature, so I re-signed the contract. Afterwards, I resigned.

– Strawberry
10 hours ago





My employer couldn't read my signature, so I re-signed the contract. Afterwards, I resigned.

– Strawberry
10 hours ago













Robusto's and fred2's answers don't address a situation which often causes doubt as to whether to write a hyphenated word or two separate words, namely, where the second is an adjective, and the first is an adverb modifying it. This answer to another question might help.

– Rosie F
7 hours ago





Robusto's and fred2's answers don't address a situation which often causes doubt as to whether to write a hyphenated word or two separate words, namely, where the second is an adjective, and the first is an adverb modifying it. This answer to another question might help.

– Rosie F
7 hours ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















16














This is not a question of grammar, but of style. Writers use hyphens with compound adjectives to avoid ambiguity so that the reader does not have to read and re-read a sentence to garner the meaning from it.



Consider:




John was a white bearded man.




Someone might try to parse this sentence at first to mean he was a white man who had a beard.




John was a white-bearded man.




This makes it quite clear that John was a man with a white beard, not a white man with a beard.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

    – repomonster
    yesterday






  • 2





    Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

    – Robusto
    yesterday











  • "John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

    – Jasper
    yesterday






  • 13





    @Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

    – Robusto
    22 hours ago











  • @Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

    – Chronocidal
    9 hours ago



















10














Robusto's answer is correct, I'm just adding another thought.



You asked:




Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?




Robusto didn't quite address that question head on. While there is a lot of flexibility in punctuation, I would say any professional editor worth his or her salt would correct 'white bearded' to 'white-bearded'. Leaving out the hyphen is not optional.



Yes, in informal contexts, writers very often leave out the hyphens, either because they are unsure how to use them, or they forget. But that's not the same as saying they are optional. They are making a mistake which can lead to misunderstandings, and knowing how and why to use hyphens in compound adjectives places you at an advantage.



Finally, often with punctuation, we say "well, it doesn't exist in spoken English, so is it really required?"



But in spoken English there is an audible difference between




The white, bearded man.




and




The white-bearded man.




It's subtle, but it's there, and it makes all the difference to the interpretation of the sentence.






share|improve this answer























  • The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

    – John Bentin
    17 hours ago











  • @JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    5 hours ago












  • "But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

    – Acccumulation
    5 hours ago










Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "481"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);

else
createEditor();

);

function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);



);













draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f200601%2fwhen-do-we-add-a-hyphen-to-a-complex-adjective-word%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes








2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









16














This is not a question of grammar, but of style. Writers use hyphens with compound adjectives to avoid ambiguity so that the reader does not have to read and re-read a sentence to garner the meaning from it.



Consider:




John was a white bearded man.




Someone might try to parse this sentence at first to mean he was a white man who had a beard.




John was a white-bearded man.




This makes it quite clear that John was a man with a white beard, not a white man with a beard.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

    – repomonster
    yesterday






  • 2





    Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

    – Robusto
    yesterday











  • "John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

    – Jasper
    yesterday






  • 13





    @Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

    – Robusto
    22 hours ago











  • @Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

    – Chronocidal
    9 hours ago
















16














This is not a question of grammar, but of style. Writers use hyphens with compound adjectives to avoid ambiguity so that the reader does not have to read and re-read a sentence to garner the meaning from it.



Consider:




John was a white bearded man.




Someone might try to parse this sentence at first to mean he was a white man who had a beard.




John was a white-bearded man.




This makes it quite clear that John was a man with a white beard, not a white man with a beard.






share|improve this answer




















  • 2





    So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

    – repomonster
    yesterday






  • 2





    Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

    – Robusto
    yesterday











  • "John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

    – Jasper
    yesterday






  • 13





    @Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

    – Robusto
    22 hours ago











  • @Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

    – Chronocidal
    9 hours ago














16












16








16







This is not a question of grammar, but of style. Writers use hyphens with compound adjectives to avoid ambiguity so that the reader does not have to read and re-read a sentence to garner the meaning from it.



Consider:




John was a white bearded man.




Someone might try to parse this sentence at first to mean he was a white man who had a beard.




John was a white-bearded man.




This makes it quite clear that John was a man with a white beard, not a white man with a beard.






share|improve this answer















This is not a question of grammar, but of style. Writers use hyphens with compound adjectives to avoid ambiguity so that the reader does not have to read and re-read a sentence to garner the meaning from it.



Consider:




John was a white bearded man.




Someone might try to parse this sentence at first to mean he was a white man who had a beard.




John was a white-bearded man.




This makes it quite clear that John was a man with a white beard, not a white man with a beard.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited yesterday

























answered yesterday









RobustoRobusto

12.1k23042




12.1k23042







  • 2





    So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

    – repomonster
    yesterday






  • 2





    Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

    – Robusto
    yesterday











  • "John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

    – Jasper
    yesterday






  • 13





    @Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

    – Robusto
    22 hours ago











  • @Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

    – Chronocidal
    9 hours ago













  • 2





    So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

    – repomonster
    yesterday






  • 2





    Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

    – Robusto
    yesterday











  • "John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

    – Jasper
    yesterday






  • 13





    @Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

    – Robusto
    22 hours ago











  • @Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

    – Chronocidal
    9 hours ago








2




2





So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

– repomonster
yesterday





So both can mean the same thing, but the other is more precise in its meaning?

– repomonster
yesterday




2




2





Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

– Robusto
yesterday





Yes. Consider hyphenating compound adjectives as providing a courtesy to your readers.

– Robusto
yesterday













"John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

– Jasper
yesterday





"John was a white-bearded man" does not rule out the possibility that John was a white man with a white beard.

– Jasper
yesterday




13




13





@Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

– Robusto
22 hours ago





@Jasper: That is irrelevant. The statement does not rule that out, nor does it rule out that he is a criminal or a spendthrift or an asthmatic. The only facts that can be determined from the statement involve his having a white beard. That is unambiguous, and it is everything that modest statement hoped to accomplish.

– Robusto
22 hours ago













@Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

– Chronocidal
9 hours ago






@Jasper That's a white red-herring. As opposed to a white-red herring, which is pink. (See also: "There he was left, hand on the wheel" and "there he was, left-hand on the wheel")

– Chronocidal
9 hours ago














10














Robusto's answer is correct, I'm just adding another thought.



You asked:




Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?




Robusto didn't quite address that question head on. While there is a lot of flexibility in punctuation, I would say any professional editor worth his or her salt would correct 'white bearded' to 'white-bearded'. Leaving out the hyphen is not optional.



Yes, in informal contexts, writers very often leave out the hyphens, either because they are unsure how to use them, or they forget. But that's not the same as saying they are optional. They are making a mistake which can lead to misunderstandings, and knowing how and why to use hyphens in compound adjectives places you at an advantage.



Finally, often with punctuation, we say "well, it doesn't exist in spoken English, so is it really required?"



But in spoken English there is an audible difference between




The white, bearded man.




and




The white-bearded man.




It's subtle, but it's there, and it makes all the difference to the interpretation of the sentence.






share|improve this answer























  • The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

    – John Bentin
    17 hours ago











  • @JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    5 hours ago












  • "But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

    – Acccumulation
    5 hours ago















10














Robusto's answer is correct, I'm just adding another thought.



You asked:




Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?




Robusto didn't quite address that question head on. While there is a lot of flexibility in punctuation, I would say any professional editor worth his or her salt would correct 'white bearded' to 'white-bearded'. Leaving out the hyphen is not optional.



Yes, in informal contexts, writers very often leave out the hyphens, either because they are unsure how to use them, or they forget. But that's not the same as saying they are optional. They are making a mistake which can lead to misunderstandings, and knowing how and why to use hyphens in compound adjectives places you at an advantage.



Finally, often with punctuation, we say "well, it doesn't exist in spoken English, so is it really required?"



But in spoken English there is an audible difference between




The white, bearded man.




and




The white-bearded man.




It's subtle, but it's there, and it makes all the difference to the interpretation of the sentence.






share|improve this answer























  • The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

    – John Bentin
    17 hours ago











  • @JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    5 hours ago












  • "But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

    – Acccumulation
    5 hours ago













10












10








10







Robusto's answer is correct, I'm just adding another thought.



You asked:




Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?




Robusto didn't quite address that question head on. While there is a lot of flexibility in punctuation, I would say any professional editor worth his or her salt would correct 'white bearded' to 'white-bearded'. Leaving out the hyphen is not optional.



Yes, in informal contexts, writers very often leave out the hyphens, either because they are unsure how to use them, or they forget. But that's not the same as saying they are optional. They are making a mistake which can lead to misunderstandings, and knowing how and why to use hyphens in compound adjectives places you at an advantage.



Finally, often with punctuation, we say "well, it doesn't exist in spoken English, so is it really required?"



But in spoken English there is an audible difference between




The white, bearded man.




and




The white-bearded man.




It's subtle, but it's there, and it makes all the difference to the interpretation of the sentence.






share|improve this answer













Robusto's answer is correct, I'm just adding another thought.



You asked:




Is this a case of people making a grammatical mistake or are both forms completely correct and it's just a matter of preference?




Robusto didn't quite address that question head on. While there is a lot of flexibility in punctuation, I would say any professional editor worth his or her salt would correct 'white bearded' to 'white-bearded'. Leaving out the hyphen is not optional.



Yes, in informal contexts, writers very often leave out the hyphens, either because they are unsure how to use them, or they forget. But that's not the same as saying they are optional. They are making a mistake which can lead to misunderstandings, and knowing how and why to use hyphens in compound adjectives places you at an advantage.



Finally, often with punctuation, we say "well, it doesn't exist in spoken English, so is it really required?"



But in spoken English there is an audible difference between




The white, bearded man.




and




The white-bearded man.




It's subtle, but it's there, and it makes all the difference to the interpretation of the sentence.







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered yesterday









fred2fred2

2,957719




2,957719












  • The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

    – John Bentin
    17 hours ago











  • @JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    5 hours ago












  • "But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

    – Acccumulation
    5 hours ago

















  • The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

    – John Bentin
    17 hours ago











  • @JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

    – Chase Ryan Taylor
    5 hours ago












  • "But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

    – Acccumulation
    5 hours ago
















The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

– John Bentin
17 hours ago





The audible difference is that, in the former, there is a short pause which is absent in the latter.

– John Bentin
17 hours ago













@JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

– Chase Ryan Taylor
5 hours ago






@JohnBentin Agreed, and I would add that I wouldn’t think of the comma as necessarily representing the pause or vice versa. I think the comma and the pause serve the same purpose: distinction.

– Chase Ryan Taylor
5 hours ago














"But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

– Acccumulation
5 hours ago





"But in spoken English there is an audible difference between" Although I did once spend a few moments wondering what a "blackhead coach" is due to an announcer's poor prosody.

– Acccumulation
5 hours ago

















draft saved

draft discarded
















































Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid


  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f200601%2fwhen-do-we-add-a-hyphen-to-a-complex-adjective-word%23new-answer', 'question_page');

);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

How should I use the fbox command correctly to avoid producing a Bad Box message?How to put a long piece of text in a box?How to specify height and width of fboxIs there an arrayrulecolor-like command to change the rule color of fbox?What is the command to highlight bad boxes in pdf?Why does fbox sometimes place the box *over* the graphic image?how to put the text in the boxHow to create command for a box where text inside the box can automatically adjust?how can I make an fbox like command with certain color, shape and width of border?how to use fbox in align modeFbox increase the spacing between the box and it content (inner margin)how to change the box height of an equationWhat is the use of the hbox in a newcommand command?

152 Atala Notae | Nexus externi | Tabula navigationis"Discovery Circumstances: Numbered Minor Planets"2000152Small-Body Database

Doxepinum Nexus interni Notae | Tabula navigationis3158DB01142WHOa682390"Structural Analysis of the Histamine H1 Receptor""Transdermal and Topical Drug Administration in the Treatment of Pain""Antidepressants as antipruritic agents: A review"