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When two or more compound adjectives contain the same word, to avoid repetition, writers usually omit that word from the compound(s) at the beginning of the series. Thus, first-class and second-class fares becomes simply first- and second-class fares, with the word class omitted in the first compound adjective.
Note that the hyphen before the omitted word is retained: first- and second-class fares (not first and second-class fares).
This structure is called a “suspended compound.” Here are some more examples:
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