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Follow the guidelines below when deciding whether to hyphenate different types of compound adjectives.
The following types of compounds require hyphens some or all of the time.
Hyphenate compounds with the structure noun-plus-adjective (in that order), whether they are used before the noun or after the verb:
Hyphenate noun-plus-participle compounds regardless of the position:
Exceptions: There are a number of them, including handmade and handwritten.
Hyphenate two-word compound adjectives consisting of a noun plus a gerund when they come before the noun:
See also HYPHENS: NOUNS WITH GERUNDS.
Hyphenate adjective-plus-noun and participle-plus-noun compounds modifying another noun:
When the compound is used predicatively, keep the hyphen only when the expression acts as an adjective:
but
Hyphenate adjective-plus-participle compounds, whether they are used before the noun or after it:
Hyphenate compounds made up of an adjective plus a noun to which the ending ed has been added, in any position in the sentence:
Hyphenate compound adjectives made up of a preposition and a noun:
Hyphenate compound adjectives whose final constituent is an adverb of direction or place (in, out, down, up, etc.) when they precede the noun:
Hyphenate a compound adjective that contains a finite verb:
Hyphenate phrases of more than two words that include an adverb or preposition and that are used as attributive adjectives (i.e. before the noun):
Hyphenate compound proper adjectives that form a true compound:
But do not hyphenate those in which a proper adjective is combined with a simple modifier:
Hyphenate compound adjectives made up of two adjectives that describe a colour without the suffix ish, whether they are placed before or after the noun.
Hyphenate compounds with the suffix ish only when they precede the noun:
but
Do not hyphenate adjectives indicating a specific shade (even if they precede the noun):
1. Do not hyphenate French or foreign words used as adjectives or placed in italics:
Note that this rule does not apply to French or foreign words no longer considered as such:
2. Do not hyphenate proper nouns used as adjectives:
3. Do not hyphenate words in quotation marks:
4. Do not hyphenate chemical terms used as adjectives:
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