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        |  inizia ad imparare There are no rules to say which words have -er or -or or -ist etc. You have to look in a dictionary.  |  |   teacher, builder, waiter, manager, driver, doctor, editor, actor. artist. chemist, journalist. tourist. shop assistant. civil servant. accountant. travel agent. student. president.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare Words in -man refer to men; words in -woman or -ess refer to women; other words refer to both men and women, e.g. teacher, doctor, student. But we can say, e.g. a woman teacher, women doctors, a male nurse, a female student.  |  |   policeman, postman, milkman, salesman, chairman. policewoman, postwoman, salesperson (=salesman/saleswoman). chairperson. actress, waitress, princess.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare We often use a noun like an adjective by putting it in front of another noun.  |  |   Sometimes the two nouns are written as one compound word or with a hyphen.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare The first noun is nearly always singular,  |  |   e.g. a shoe shop (a shop that sells shoes).  |  |  | 
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| inizia ad imparare |  |   a person who drives a bus.  |  |  | 
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| inizia ad imparare |  |   a sandwich with egg in it.  |  |  | 
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| inizia ad imparare |  |   police-car. bicycle factory. youth club. pocket-money. school-bus. bank robber. film star. Christmas present. January sales. evening meal. housework. paper bag. gold watch. orange juice. garden gate. table leg. kitchen door. girl-friend.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare greenhouse and waiting room are compound nouns. The stress is on the first part of the compound.  |  |   I grow tomatoes in the greenhouse. We sat in the waiting room.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   high school. grandfather. shorthand. hot dog. drinking water. riding lesson. playing-field. washing-machine. shopping bag.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare Most nouns formed from verbs have of before the object, but some nouns have other prepositions after them.  |  |   e.g. the building of the new university. an attack on the government, a change in/of policy.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare give → giving. make → making etc.  |  |   The building of the new university will begin next month.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare same word for verb and noun (attack, change etc.).  |  |   The promise of more money for schools has pleased teachers.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare communicate → communication, suggest → suggestion, produce → production etc.  |  |   The discussion of our economic problems was very interesting.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare move → movement, develop → development etc.  |  |   The employment of 3,000 people will be a great help to the area.  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare The noun in the compound is always singular. e.g. stamp-collecting (=collecting stamps).  |  |   One of his hobbies is stamp-collecting. Letter-writing is a job I don't enjoy. I like sunbathing. Is water-skiing difficult?  |  |  | 
|   The noun in the compound is always singular, e.g. a vote-winning policy (= a policy that wins votes).   inizia ad imparare We normally use a hyphen in a compound adjective, especially when it comes before a noun. |  |   Britain is an oil-producing country. Reducing taxes is a vote-winning policy. Are the British hard-working enough?  |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare We normally use a hyphen in a compound adjective, especially when it comes before a noun.  |  |   Mrs Johnson always looks well dressed. She's the fair-haired woman, isn't she? You've got a very badly paid job.    Adverb/adjective + -ed form. |  |  | 
|   The noun in the compound is always singular, e.g. a two-car familly (= a family with two cars).   inizia ad imparare We normally use a hyphen (-) in compound adjectives. |  |   They are a two-car family. It's a fifteen-minute drive to Glasgow.  |  |  | 
|   We can only use a compound adjective with a number before a noun.   inizia ad imparare Compare Mr Gould is forty years old. |  |   Mr Gould is a forty-year-old businessman. There was a three-foot-deep hole in the road.    Number + noun + adjective. |  |  | 
|  inizia ad imparare We use a prefix to change or add to the meaning of a word.  |  |  |  |  | 
|   We can sometimes use un-, in-, im-, ir-, il-, dis-, or non- to make an opposite.   inizia ad imparare You have to look in a dictionary to find the correct prefix. |  |   The story is untrue. It was a very informal meeting. I disagree with you. Let's find a non-smoker.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   Most workers here are underpaid.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   You can re-use these envelopes.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   I must have miscounted the money.  |  |  | 
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| inizia ad imparare |  |   These shoes are substandard.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   The government is pro-Catholic.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   Try the multi-storey car park.  |  |  | 
| inizia ad imparare |  |   We all sat in a semi-circle.  |  |  |