Compounds in capital letters
75
- ground-rent
- harvest-time
- head-right
- heaven-high
- high-priest
- high-water mark
- hill-bound
- hind-leg
- hind-quarters
- horse-power
- house-servant
- imposing-stone
- judgment-day
- knight-errant
- land-office
- laughing-stock
- law-abiding
- law-writer
- live-stock
- livery-stable
- long-suffering
- looker-on
- loop-hole
- man-of-war
- many-sided
- May-pole
- mill-pond
- moss-covered
- night-time
- old-fashioned
- out-building
- party-wall
- peace-loving
- pew-owner
- purchase-money
- rent-charge
- rent-service
- resting-place
- safe-keeping
- set-off
- sewing-machine
- side-track
- silver-tongued
- smart-money
- snow-bound
- snow-storm
- spell-bound
- star-chamber
- starting-point
- steam-engine
- stock-raising
- stumbling-block
- subject-matter
- table-land
- terra-cotta
- text-book
- text-writer
- title-page
- trade-wind
- water-mark
- water-proof
- way-bill
- way-station
- well-being
- wide-spread
- wrong-doer
Compound words often cause over-wide spacing, but the gaps so made may be modified by putting a thin space on each side of the hyphen.
A compound word within a line of capital letters should have an en dash to mark the compound; but when it has to be divided at the end of a line, the hyphen should be used.