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Felixxx Posted 13 years ago
Grammar

a bit confuse about noun

is there no any structure to combine any noun's that we want with noun-noun? what if noun + noun without (-)

infinite ocean / infinity ocean?
education industry / educational industry?

so it can actually use noun + noun ?
  

Top answer

and i have one more question is it true if we want to express more than one adj like "Amazing and Infinite Pools" in this case it is better to express Amazing Infinity Pools? so it is the usage of noun + noun otherwise we usually use adj + noun?

  • and i have one more question is it true if we want to express more than one adj like "Amazing and Infinite Pools" in this case it is better to express Amazing Infinity Pools?
  • so it is the usage of noun + noun otherwise we usually use adj + noun?
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7 Answers
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and i have one more question
is it true if we want to express more than one adj like "Amazing and Infinite Pools"
in this case it is better to express Amazing Infinity Pools?
so it is the usage of noun + noun otherwise we usually use adj + noun?
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sorry for my poor english , i really tried to make it clear as possible as i can
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Yes, those are called compound nouns. Usually if you follow their linguistic history you will find that they start being written as two words, then move to a hyphenated form, and later are joined as one word. Here are a few examples:

football
campground
raincoat

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About your second question, amazing infinity pools is not correct. You can use two adjectives separated by a comma or the word and.
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Hmmm. Emotion: smile The subtitle says "Dive into these breathtaking infinity-edge pools." It seems that infinity in the main title is shor
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That's what they call a swimming pool that constantly overflows at the edge looking out over a precipice—infinity pool.

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