Phrasal Verb = 5), and Noun + Noun Compound Adverb meaning comes from the same verbs or nouns to modifiers. Ex: cover up = cover-up (phrasal verb) (compound noun) The matter was well covered up and never reached the director. The cover-up did not reach the director. passer + by = passer-by (N) (ADV) (compound noun) To make a plural noun to s at the end, such as: Most passers-by stopped to watch the man's performance. Noun + Preposition + Noun) meaning of the name is derived from the combined words together as a combined extension. Ex: brother-in-law (= the brother of your husband or wife, etc. = related because of law) lady-in-waiting (= a woman who looks after and serves a queen or princess) To make a plural noun to s at the end of the first word or the first word is changed to the plural noun such as brothers-in-law, ladies-in-waiting. If this is not the official language, spoken language, or may fill the laws such as the law to be s brother-in laws, and if it uses that call the in-laws (= someone who related legal or law, they said, Thailand saphai) Combined with nouns, all nouns, such as alarm clock, counting the baby-sitter, the bride-to-be, parking meter, washing machine, etc., and count nouns, such as air conditioning, not heart failure, washing powder, dry-cleaning, etc. Some have only a singular image, such as the general public, the welfare state, the mother tongue, the greenhouse effect. Some words used only in the plural, such as baked beans, as images, natural resources, winter sports, swimming trunks, yellow pages, etc.
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