Monday, November 25, 2019
Compound Words Dont Always Compare
Compound Words Dont Always Compare Compound Words Donââ¬â¢t Always Compare Compound Words Donââ¬â¢t Always Compare By Mark Nichol When it comes to linking words to form new words, English is a particularly mischievous language. Different compound words with an element word in common, or pairs of words analogous to each other, may be inconsistent about the presence or absence of a letter space or a hyphen when you see them listed in the dictionary and other resources. That goes especially for directional duos. Keep a sharp lookout for these spacing shenanigans: Front and Back For some perverse reason, a few common compounds that include front, and their back correspondents, are treated differently: ââ¬Å"front door,â⬠backdoor (but only as an adjective); ââ¬Å"front seat,â⬠backseat; ââ¬Å"front yard,â⬠backyard. How could this have happened? Perhaps its the ubiquity of other closed compounds beginning with back (such as backache, background, and backlash) compared to the absence of front-loaded analogues. Speaking of front-load, compounds beginning with front, such as that word and ââ¬Å"front man,â⬠are invariably open or hyphenated, and if they have back counterparts (you can back-load, but no one refers to a back man), those are also open or hyphenated. Another contributing factor may be that back constructions are idiomatically richer: ââ¬Å"backdoor man,â⬠ââ¬Å"backseat driver,â⬠and ââ¬Å"backyard grillâ⬠have given compounds beginning with back a higher profile, so itââ¬â¢s likely they tend to evolve from open to closed compounds with greater alacrity becoming front-runners, as it were. In and Out After studying compounds beginning with in, Iââ¬â¢m done in. Adjectival forms, whether tangible (in-flight) or intangible (in-depth), are often hyphenated, but so are many noun forms, such as in-group and in-joke. Meanwhile, most hyphenated terms beginning with out are obscure, like the fiscal term out-year, or as with out-migrate (ââ¬Å"emigrateâ⬠). Exceptions include out-front, meaning ââ¬Å"honest,â⬠and out-there, meaning ââ¬Å"unusual.â⬠Fortunately, the most common usages are inbounds (though the antonym for that word is not outbounds, but ââ¬Å"out of boundsâ⬠). Indoor and outdoor, inward and outward, inset and outset (though that last pair do not have antonymic meanings) donââ¬â¢t try to outfox or outbox us. But speaking of outbox, why, in clerical contexts, is it in-box and out-box, not inbox and outbox? This reasoning is a stretch: Though you canââ¬â¢t inbox someone, you can outbox them, so that formââ¬â¢s already taken. Iââ¬â¢m satisfied to see the clerical terms remain hyphenated, while the pugilistic outbox is closed. Up and Down Why do you show up for a showdown? In this case, one is a verb phrase and the other is a noun. But compound nouns ending with up are usually closed (buildup, markup, windup). An exception for closure is close-up (meaning ââ¬Å"a proximal view,â⬠not ââ¬Å"to lock a store for the night,â⬠which would be hyphenated only before a noun: ââ¬Å"He carefully followed the close-up procedureâ⬠). Thatââ¬â¢s because it follows the rule that words ending with vowels are generally hyphenated to others, rather than, well, closed up. Adjectival compounds beginning with up (such as up-country and up-tempo) and down (generally, more obscure than their up counterparts, like down-home) tend to be hyphenated. However, up nouns are usually closed (upshot, downfall). Though open or hyphenated up equivalents are almost nonexistent, down compounds can be open (the card-playing term ââ¬Å"down cardâ⬠) or hyphenated (the music term down-bow) as well. Whatââ¬â¢s the take-away (not to be confused with take-in)? Keep your dictionary handy. Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Spelling category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:When to Capitalize Animal and Plant NamesIs There a Reason ââ¬Å"the Reason Whyâ⬠Is Considered Wrong?Prepositions to Die With
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