L'outil Writing Tips a été archivé et ne sera plus mis à jour jusqu'à son retrait définitif.
Pour obtenir notre contenu le plus à jour, veuillez consulter Writing Tips Plus, un outil combinant le contenu des outils Writing Tips et The Canadian Style. N'oubliez pas de modifier vos favoris!
A compound noun is simply a compound that functions as a noun. Usually, a compound noun will contain a noun as one of its elements. But that doesn’t have to be the case. For example, sing-along is a compound formed from a verb and an adverb, but it functions as a noun:
Follow the guidelines below in using hyphens with compound nouns.
1. Hyphenate two nouns representing different but equally important functions, i.e. where the hyphen denotes the relationship "both A and B":
2. Hyphenate nouns normally written as two words, when they have a modifier and when ambiguity would otherwise result:
Similarly, compound nouns normally written as a single word must be separated into their component parts and then joined to their modifier by a hyphen when the modifier applies only to the first part:
3. Hyphenate compound units of measurement made by combining single units that stand in a mathematical relationship to each other:
4. Hyphenate compounds that include a finite verb:
5. Hyphenate nouns of family relationship formed with great and in-law:
© Services publics et Approvisionnement Canada, 2024
TERMIUM Plus®, la banque de données terminologiques et linguistiques du gouvernement du Canada
Outils d'aide à la rédaction – Writing Tips
Un produit du Bureau de la traduction