U.S. Government Printing Office Style Manual/Compounding Rules

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6. Compounding Rules
(See also Chapter 7 "Compounding Examples")
6.1.

A compound word is a union of two or more words, either with or without a hyphen. It conveys a unit idea that is not as clearly or quickly conveyed by the component words in unconnected succession. The hyphen is a mark of punctuation that not only unites but separates the component words, and thus facilitates understanding, aids readability, and ensures correct pronunciation. When compound words must be divided at the end of a line, such division should be made leaving prefixes and combining forms of more than one syllable intact.

6.2.

In applying the rules in this chapter and in using the list of examples in the following chapter, "Compounding Examples," the fluid nature of our language should be kept in mind. Word forms constantly undergo modification. Two-word forms, which often acquired the hyphen first, frequently bypass the hyphen stage and instantly assume a one-word form.

6.3.

The rules, therefore, are somewhat flexible. Exceptions must necessarily be allowed. Current language trends continue to point to closing up certain words which, through either frequent use or widespread dissemination through modern media exposure, have become fixed in the reader's mind as units of thought. The tendency to merge two short words continues to be a natural progression toward better communication.

General rules
6.4.

In general, omit the hyphen when words appear in regular order and the omission causes no ambiguity in sense or sound.

banking hours
blood pressure
book value
census taker
day laborer
eye opener
fellow citizen
living costs
palm oil
patent right
real estate
rock candy
training ship
violin teacher
6.5.

Words are usually combined to express a literal or nonliteral (figurative) unit idea that would not be as clearly expressed in unconnected succession.

afterglow
bookkeeping
cupboard
forget-me-not
gentleman
newsprint
right-of-way
whitewash
6.6.

A derivative of a compound retains the solid or hyphenated form of the original compound unless otherwise indicated.

coldbloodedness
footnoting
ill-advisedly
outlawry
praiseworthiness
railroader
Y-shaped
6.7.

A hyphen is used to avoid doubling a vowel or tripling a consonant, except after the short prefixes co, de, pre, pro, and re, which are generally printed solid. (See also rules 6.29 and 6.32.)

cooperation
deemphasis
preexisiting
anti-inflation
micro-organism
semi-independent
brass-smith
Inverness-shire
thimble-eye
ultra-atomic
shell-like
hull-less
but
co-occupant
cross section
Solid compounds
6.8.

Print solid two nouns that form a third when the compound has only one primary accent, especially when the prefixed noun consists of only one syllable or when one of the elements loses its original accent.

airship
bathroom
bookseller
cupboard
dressmaker
fishmonger
footnote
locksmith
workman
6.9.

Print solid a noun consisting of a short verb and an adverb as its second element, except when the use of the solid form would interfere with comprehension.

blowout
breakdown
hangover
holdup
makeready
markoff
pickup
builddown
cooldown
runoff
setup
showdown
thowaway
tradeoff
flareback
giveaway
but
cut-in
phase-in
run-in
sit-in
6.10.

Compounds beginning with the following nouns are usually printed solid.

book
eye
horse
house
mill
play
school
shop
way
wood
work
6.11.

Compounds ending in the following are usually printed solid, especially when the prefixed word consists of one syllable.

berry
bird
blossom
board
boat
book
borne
bound
box
boy
brained
bug
bush
cam
craft
field
fish
flower
fly
girl
grower
headed
hearted
holder
hopper
house
keeper
keeping
land
light
like
line
load
maid
maker
making
man
master
mate
mill
mistress
monger
over
owner
but #ownership
person
picker
picking
piece
plane
power
proof
roach
room
shop
site
skin
smith
stone
store
tail
tight
time (not clock)
ward
ware
water
way
wear
weed
wide
wise
woman
wood
work
worker
working
worm
worthy
writer
6.12.

Print solid any, every, no, and some when combined with body, thing, and where. When one is the second element, print as two words if meaning a single or particular person or thing. To avoid mispronunciation, print no one as two words at all times.

anybody
anything
anywhere
anyone
everybody
everything
everywhere
everyone
nobody
nothing
nowhere
no one
somebody
something
somewhere
someone

but any one of us may stay; every one of the pilots is responsible; every body was accounted for

6.13.

Print compound personal pronouns as one word.

herself
himself
itself
myself
oneself
ourselves
themselves
thyself
yourself
yourselves
6.14.

Print as one word compass directions consisting of two points, but use a hyphen after the first point when three points are combined.

northeast
southwest
north-northeast
south-southwest

also north-south alignment

Unit modifiers
6.15.
Print a hyphen between words, or abbreviations and words, combined to form a unit modifier immediately preceding the word modified, except as indicated in rule 6.16 and elsewhere throughout this chapter. This applies particularly to combinations in which one element is a present or past participle.
agreed-upon standards
Federal-State-local cooperation
Baltimore-Washington road
German-English descent
collective-bargaining talks
guided-missile program
contested-election case
hearing-impaired class
contract-bar rule
high-speed line
cost-of-living increase
large-scale project
drought-stricken area
law-abiding citizen
English-speaking nation
long-term loan
fire-tested material
line-item veto

long-term-payment loan
low-cost housing
lump-sum payment
most-favored-nation clause
multiple-purpose uses
no-par-value stock
one-on-one situation
part-time personnel
rust-resistant covering
service-connected disability
state-of-the-art technology
supply-side economics
tool-and-die maker
up-or-down vote
U.S.-owned property; U.S.-flagship
1-inch diameter; 2-inch-diameter pipe
a 4-percent increase, the 10-percent rise
but
4 percent citric acid
4 percent interest. (Note the absence of an article: a, an, or the. The word of is understood here.)
6.16.

Where meaning is clear and readability is not aided, it is not necessary to use a hyphen to form a temporary or made compound. Restraint should be exercised in forming unnecessary combinations of words used in normal sequence.

atomic energy power
bituminous coal industry
child welfare plan
civil rights case
civil service examination
durable goods industry
flood control study
free enterprise system
ground water levels
high school student
elementary school grade
income tax form
interstate commerce law
land bank loan
land use program
life insurance company
mutual security funds
national defense appropriation
natural gas company
per capita expenditure
Portland cement plant
production credit loan
public at large
public utility plant
real estate tax
small businessman
Social Security pension
soil conservation measures
special delivery mail
parcel post delivery
speech correction class

but no-hyphen rule (readability aided); not no hyphen rule

6.17.

Print without a hyphen a compound predicate adjective or predicate noun the second element of which is a present participle.

The duties were price fixing.
The shale was oil bearing.
The effects were far reaching.
The area is used for beet raising.
6.18.

Print without a hyphen a compound predicate adjective the second element of which is a past participle. Omit the hyphen in a predicate modifier of comparative or superlative degree.

The area is drought stricken.
This material is fire tested.
The paper is fine grained.
The cars are higher priced.
Moderately fine grained wood.
The reporters are better informed.
6.19.

Print without a hyphen a two -word modifier the first element of which is a comparative or superlative.

better drained soil
best liked books
higher level decision
highest priced apartment
larger sized dress
better paying job
lower income group
but
uppercrust society
lowercase, uppercase type
upperclassman
bestseller (noun)
lighter-than-air craft
higher-than-market price
6.20.

Do not use a hyphen in a two-word unit modifier the first element of which is an adverb ending in ly, nor use hyphens in a three-word unit modifier the first two elements of which are adverbs.

eagerly awaited moment
wholly owned subsidiary
unusually well preserved specimen
very well defined usage
longer than usual lunch period
still-lingering doubt
not too distant future
most often heard phrase
but
ever-normal granary
ever-rising flood
still-new car
well-known lawyer
well-kept secret
6.21.

Proper nouns used as unit modifiers, either in their basic or derived form, retain their original form; but the hyphen is printed when combining forms.

Latin American countries
North Carolina roads
a Mexican-American
South American trade
Spanish-American pride
Winston-Salem festival
African-American program
Anglo-Saxon period
Franco-Prussian War
Seventh-day Adventists
but
Minneapolis-St. Paul region
North American-South American sphere
French-English descent
Washington-Wilkes-Barre route or Washington/Wilkes-Barre route

6.22.
Do not confuse a modifier with the word it modifies.
elderly clothesman
old-clothes man
competent shoemaker
wooden-shoe maker
field canning factory
tomato-canning factory
brave servicemen
service men and women
light blue hat (weight)
light-blue hat (color)
average taxpayer
income-tax payer
American flagship (military)
American-flagship
well-trained schoolteacher
elementary school teacher
preschool children (kindergarten)
pre-school children (before school)
rezoned wastesite
hazardous-waste site
but
common stockholder
stock ownership
small businessman
working men and women
steam powerplant site
meat packinghouse owner
6.23.
Where two or more hyphenated compounds have a common basic element and this element is omitted in all but the last term, the hyphens are retained.
2- to 3- and 4- to 5-ton trucks
2- by 4-inch boards, but boards 2 to 6 inches wide
8-, 10-, and 16-foot boards
6.4-, 3.1-, and 2-percent pay raises
moss- and ivy-covered walls, not moss and ivy-covered walls
long- and short-term money rates, not long and short-term money rates

but twofold or threefold, not two or threefold

goat, sheep, and calf skins, not goat, sheep, and calfskins
intrastate and intracity, not intra-state and -city
American owned and managed companies
preoperative and postoperative examination
6.24.
Do not use a hyphen in a unit modifier consisting of a foreign phrase.
ante bellum days
bona fide transaction
ex officio member
per capita tax
per diem employee
prima facie evidence
6.25.
Do not print a hyphen in a unit modifier containing a letter or a numeral as its second element.
abstract B pages
article 3 provisions
class II railroad
grade A milk
point 4 program
ward D beds
6.26.
Do not use a hyphen in a unit modifier enclosed in quotation marks unless it is normally a hyphenated term, but quotation marks are not to be used in lieu of a hyphen.
"blue sky" law
"good neighbor" policy
"tie-in" sale
but
right-to-work law
line-item veto
6.27.
Print combination color terms as separate words, but use a hyphen when such color terms are unit modifiers.
bluish green
dark green
orange red
bluish-green feathers
iron-gray sink
silver-gray body
6.28.
Do not use a hyphen between independent adjectives preceding a noun.
big gray cat
a fine old southern gentleman


Prefixes, suffixes, and combining forms
6.29.
Print solid combining forms and prefixes, except as indicated elsewhere.
afterbirth
Anglomania
antedate
antislavery
biweekly
bylaw
circumnavigation
cisalpine
cooperate
contraposition
countercase
deenergize
demitasse
excommunicate
extracurricular
foretell
heroicomic
hypersensitive
hypoacid
inbound
infrared
interview
intraspinal
introvert
isometric
macroanalysis
mesothorax
metagenesis
microphone
misstate
monogram
multicolor
neophyte
nonneutral
offset
outbake
overactive
pancosmic
paracentric
particoated
peripatetic
planoconvex
polynodal
postscript
preexist
proconsul
pseudoscholastic
reenact
retrospect
semiofficial
stepfather
subsecretary
supermarket
thermocouple
transonic
transship
tricolor
ultraviolet
unnecessary
underflow
6.30.
Print solid combining forms and suffixes, except as indicated elsewhere.
portable
geography
procurement
coverage
manhood
innermost
operate
selfish
partnership
plebiscite
pumpkin
lonesome
twenty fold
meatless
homestead
spoonful
outlet
northward
kilogram
wavelike
clockwise
6.31.
Print solid words ending in like, but use a hyphen to avoid tripling a consonant or when the first element is a proper name.
lifelike
lilylike
girllike
bell-like
Scotland-like
McArtor-like
6.32.
Use a hyphen or hyphens to prevent mispronunciation, to ensure a definite accent on each element of the compound, or to avoid ambiguity.
anti-hog-cholera serum
co-occurrence
co-op
mid-decade
multi-ply (several plies)
non-civil-service position
non-tumor-bearing tissue
pre-midcourse review
pre-position (before)
pro-choice
pro-life
re-cover (cover again)
re-creation (create again)
re-lay (lay again)
re-sorting (sort again)
re-treat (treat again)
un-ionized
un-uniformity
but
rereferred
rereviewed
6.33.
Use a hyphen to join duplicated prefixes.
re-redirect
sub-subcommittee
super-superlative
6.34.
Print with a hyphen the prefixes ex, self, and quasi.
ex-governor
ex-serviceman
ex-son-in-law
ex-vice-president
self-control
self-educated
quasi-academic
quasi-argument
quasi-corporation
quasi-young
but
selfhood
selfsame
6.35.

Unless usage demands otherwise, use a hyphen to join a prefix or combining form to a capitalized word. (The hyphen is retained in words of this class set in caps.)

anti-American
pro-British
un-American
non-Government
neo-Nazi
post-World War II or post-Second World War
non-Federal
but
nongovernmental
overanglicize
transatlantic
Numerical compounds
6.36.

Print a hyphen between the elements of compound numbers from twenty-one to ninety-nine and in adjective compounds with a numerical first element.

twenty-one
twenty-first
6-footer
6-foot-ll-inch man
24-inch ruler
3-week vacation
8-hour day
10-minute delay
20th-century progress
3-to-l ratio
5-to-4vote
.22-caliber cartridge
2-cent-per-pound tax
four-in-hand tie
three-and-twenty
two-sided question
multimillion-dollar fund
10-dollar-per-car tax
thirty- (30-) day period
but
one hundred twenty-one
100-odd
foursome
threescore
foursquare
$20 million airfield
second grade children
6.37.

Print without a hyphen a modifier consisting of a possessive noun preceded by a numeral. (See also rule 8.14.)

1 month's layoff
3 weeks' vacation
1 week's pay
1 minute's delay
2 hours' work

but a 1-minute delay

6.38.

Print a hyphen between the elements of a fraction, but omit it between the numerator and the denominator when the hyphen appears in either or in both.

one-thousandth
two-thirds
two one-thousandths
twenty-three thirtieths
twenty-one thirty-seconds
three-fourths of an inch
6.39.

A unit modifier following and reading back to the word or words modified takes a hyphen and is printed in the singular.

motor, alternating-current, 3-phase, 60-cycle, 115-volt
glass jars: 5-gallon, 2-gallon, 1-quart
belts: 2-inch, 1¼-inch, ½-inch, ¼-inch
Civil and military titles
6.40.

Do not hyphenate a civil or military title denoting a single office, but print a double title with a hyphen.

ambassador at large
assistant attorney general
commander in chief
comptroller general
Congressman at Large
major general
notary public
secretary general
secretary-treasurer
sergeant at arms
treasurer-manager
under secretary
but under-secretaryship
vice president
but vice-presidency
6.41.

The adjectives elect and designate, as the last element of a title, require a hyphen.

President-elect (Federal)
ambassador-designate
Vice-President-elect (Federal)
minister-designate
Secretary of Housing and Urban Development-designate
Scientific and technical terms
6.42.

Do not print a hyphen in scientific terms (names of chemicals, diseases, animals, insects, plants) used as unit modifiers if no hyphen appears in their original form.

carbon monoxide poisoning
guinea pig raising
hog cholera serum
methyl bromide solution
stem rust control
equivalent uranium content
whooping cough remedy
but
Russian-olive plantings
Douglas-fir tree
6.43.

Chemical elements used in combination with figures use a hyphen, except with superior figures.

Freon-12
polonium-210
uranium-235
U235
Sr90
92U234
6.44.

Note use of hyphens and closeup punctuation in chemical formulas.

9-nitroanthra(1,9,4,10)bis(1)oxathiazone-2,7-bisdioxide
Cr-Ni-Mo
2,4-D
6.45.

Print a hyphen between the elements of technical or contrived compound units of measurement.

candela-hour
crop-year
horsepower-hour
light-year
passenger-mile
staff-hour
work-year

but kilowatthour

Improvised compounds
6.46.

Print with a hyphen the elements of an improvised compound.

blue-pencil (v.)
18-year-old (n., u.m.)
know-it-all (n.)
know-how (n.)
lick-the-finger-and-test-the-wind economics
make-believe (n., u.m.)
one-man-one-vote principle
roll-on/roll-off ship
George "Pay-As-You-Go" Miller
stick-in-the-mud (n.)
let-George-do-it attitude
how-to-be-beautiful course
hard-and-fast rule
penny-wise and pound-foolish policy
first-come-first- served basis

but a basis of first come, first served

6.47.

Use hyphens in a prepositional-phrase compound noun consisting of three or more words.

cat-o'-nine-tails
government-in-exile
grant-in-aid
jack-in-the-box
man-of-war
mother-in-law
mother-of-pearl
patent-in-fee
but
heir at law
next of kin
officer in charge
6.48.

When the corresponding noun form is printed as separate words, the verb form is always hyphenated.

cold-shoulder
blue-pencil
cross-brace
6.49.

Print a hyphen in a compound formed of repetitive or conflicting terms and in a compound naming the same thing under two aspects.

boogie-woogie
comedy-ballet
dead-alive
devil-devil
even-stephen
farce-melodrama
fiddle-faddle
hanky-panky
murder-suicide
nitty-gritty
pitter-patter
razzle-dazzle
walkie-talkie :nitwit
willy-nilly
young-old
but
bowwow
dillydally
hubbub
riffraff
6.50.

Use a hyphen in a nonliteral compound expression containing an apostrophe in its first element.

asses'-eyes
ass's-foot
bull's-eye
cat's-paw
crow's-nest
6.51.

Use a hyphen to join a single capital letter to a noun or a participle.

H-bomb
I-beam
T-shaped
U-boat
C-chip
C-section
V-necked
S-iron
T-square
X-ed out
but
x ray
x raying
S turns
6.52.

Print idiomatic phrases without hyphens.

come by
inasmuch as
insofar as
Monday week
nowadays