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Writing guide

  • Folder icon closed Folder open iconPreparing to get your message out
    • The message
    • The audience
    • Packaging
    • Drawing up a skeleton
  • Folder icon closed Folder open iconWriting to be read
    • How people read: print and online publications
    • Practical tips for achieving a plain, clear writing style
    • Plain language
    • Plain structure
    • The paragraph
    • Tools for effective writing
  • Folder icon closed Folder open iconStyle
    • UK English vs US English
    • Words to use and words to avoid
    • Nouns and Verbs
    • Capitalisation
    • Hyphens
    • Compound words
    • Singular and plural
    • Digital dialect
    • Numbers and dates
    • Abbreviations and acronyms
    • Countries and currencies
    • Signatures and names
    • Punctuation
  • Folder icon closed Folder open iconFormatting
    • Chapter titles and headings
    • Lists
    • Visuals: tables, graphs, diagrams
    • Table of contents
    • Headings
    • Quoted matter
    • Bold and italics
    • Footnotes
    • Other tools
  • Folder icon closed Folder open iconReferences and bibliographies
    • References
    • Bibliographies
    • Sample bibliographical entries
Style

Compound words

When words are put together to yield a new meaning, they form a compound. Compound words can be written in three ways: as open compounds (ice cream, ), closed compounds (farmyard, doorknob), or hyphenated compounds (mid-range, long-term).

Compounds are a part of the language that is in constant flux so do not worry about them too much. They always start as separate words, however, so keep them separate if you are in doubt. Some of them grow together as their usage evolves.

A classic ETF example is the word policymaker that has gone through the iterations policy maker and policy-maker before ending where it should be today: policymaker.

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