Compound Words
Compound Words
Material
Noun + Noun
dream-world
postman
bed-time
motorcycle
rabbit-hole
honeybee
chessmen
cork-screw
sun-dial
wonderland
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Compound Words – General English Study
Material
Adverb + Noun
insight
out-patient
postscript
telephone operator, science teacher Object + Agential Noun with ‘er’/ ‘or’
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Compound Words – General English Study
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Task: Combine the words given below and form new words by
blending.
motorway + hotel =
motor + bike =
television + broadcast =
travel + catalogue =
international + police =
teleprinter + exchange =
electro + execute =
binary + digit =
motor + pedal cycle =
news + broadcast =
(Clue: One portion of the word to be formed is highlighted.)
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Compound Words – General English Study
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In the following sentences the words formed by clipping are presented in italics. Match the words with those
given in the box to form the original word.
1. She has been on the phone for the last one hour.
2. I need a kilo of sugar to make this sweet.
3. The porter carried the cases to the waiting taxi.
4. My baby sister falls asleep in the pram when we take her out on a walk.
5. He likes to spend Saturday nights at the disco.
(suit ______ , _______ gram, ____e_____bulator, _______theque, tele________, ______ cab)
Check the dictionary to give the unclipped form of the following words.
1. burger 2. copter 3. Demo 4. tele 5. Mike
Rewrite the following sentences replacing the word in italics with an explanatory phrase.
e.g. We can stop at a motel for lunch.
We can stop for lunch at a hotel on the motorway (highway).
1. Most industrial towns are covered in smog in the early hours of the day.
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Compound Words – General English Study
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2. Deepak is a techno-wizard.
3. I prefer a vegeburger to a sandwich.
4. The British Council runs an infomercial centre to help students who want to go abroad.
5. The Russian ballet dancer presented a lecdem at the Russian Cultural Centre.
2. Eponymous words
Words whose origin is traced to individuals are known as Eponyms and the words derived from these names are
called Eponymous words.
e.g.:
1. ‘Boycott’ means ‘to shun or refuse to have dealings with as a means of protest or to force change’. Captain
Charles Boycott, a 19th Century Irish land agent was shunned by local tenants for refusing to lower their rents.
2. ‘Mesmerism’ means ‘the process or practice of inducing a hypnotic state’. Dr.Franz Anton Mesmer (1734 –
1815) was a German Physician who popularised the practice.
3. ‘Machiavellian’ means ‘cunning, crafty, seizing opportunities’.
Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527), a Florentine statesman, in his book ‘The Prince’, described how a determined
ruler could gain and keep political power regardless of morality.
Given below are words derived from the name of persons. A brief account of the person is provided. Can you
guess the meaning of the word from the account?
1. Silhouette - Etienne de Silhouette, a French Author (1709(Noun) - 1767) and politician, decorated his
residence with outline portraits.
2. Draconian - Draco, Chief Magistrate of Athens, (Adjective) introduced a harsh penal code in 621 BC.
3. Lynch - Captain William Lynch, an 18th century (Verb) Virginian Planter and Justice of Peace, would
summarily execute the arrested persons usually by hanging without a proper trial.
3. a. Euphemisms
Euphemism is the use of an inoffensive word or phrase in place of a harsh or possibly offensive one.
e.g. This school is for the visually challenged. (blind)
Here are a few sentences in which euphemisms have been used:
1. The funeral director / mortician (undertaker) was called to carry out the preparations for the funeral.
2. You will find the rest-room (lavatory) at the end of the corridor.
3. My mother is a homemaker. (housewife)
3. b. Cliche
The word ‘cliché’ comes from the French word ‘clicher’
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Compound Words – General English Study
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‘Cliché’ refers to ‘a phrase or word which is used too often to the point of monotony’. A good user of English
will be too careful to avoid clichés in his speech and writing.
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