Luyện ngữ pháp - English Grammar in Use - Intermediate - (Unit 80: Noun noun)


Noun+ noun

A You can use two nouns together (noun + noun) to mean one thing/person/idea etc. For example:
  • a tennis ball income tax the city centre

The first noun is like an adjective. It tells us what kind of thing/person/idea etc. For example:
a tennis ball = a ball used to play tennis
a bus driver = the driver of a bus
a road accident = an accident that happens on the road
income tax = tax that you pay on your income
the city centre = the centre of the city
a Paris hotel = a hotel in Paris
my life story = the story of my life

So you can say:
  • a television camera
  • a television programme
  • a television studio
  • a television producer

(these are all different things or people to do with television)
  • language problems
  • marriage problems
  • health problems
  • work problems

(these are all different kinds of problems)

Compare:
garden vegetables (= vegetables that are grown in a garden)
a vegetable garden (= a garden where vegetables are grown)

Sometimes the first word ends in -ing. Usually these are things we use for doing something:
  • a frying pan (= a pan for frying)
  • a washing machine
  • a swimming pool

Sometimes there are more than two nouns together:
  • I waited at the hotel reception desk.
  • We watched the World Swimming Championships on television.
  • If you want to play table tennis (= a game), you need a table tennis table (= a table).
B When two nouns are together like this, sometimes we write them as one word and sometimes as two separate words. For example:
  • a headache toothpaste a weekend a car park a road sign

There are no clear rules for this. If you are not sure, write two words.

C Note the difference between:
a sugar bowl (maybe empty) and a bowl of sugar (= a bowl with sugar in it)
a shopping bag (maybe empty) and a bag of shopping (= a bag full of shopping)
D

When we use noun + noun, the first noun is like an adjective. It is normally singular, but the meaning is often plural. For example: a bookshop is a shop where you can buy books, an apple tree is a tree that has apples.

In the same way we say:
  • a three-hour journey (= a journey that takes three hours)
  • a ten-pound note (not pounds)
  • a four-week course (not weeks)
  • a six-mile walk (not miles)
  • two 14-year-old girls (not years)

Compare:
  • It was a four-week course.
    but The course lasted four weeks.


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