Nouns - urly.fi/3Yc8

Deeper Into the Nouns

A WORD ABOUT COMPOUND NOUNS

A compound noun (such as football or ice cream) becomes a plural when you add an 's' at the end of the most important word of the compound, also called the head of the compound. (The other part just describes or gives more detail about the actual "head" word).

Examples:

compounds head plural  
ice cream cream
ice creams  
car park park car parks  
mother-in-law mother mothers-in-law your wife's / husband's mother

Compound nouns with -ful
Compound nouns with '-ful' Plural is either...
handful handsful handfuls
mouthful mouthsful mouthfuls
spoonful spoonsful spoonfuls
bucketful bucketsful bucketfuls
cupful cupsful cupfuls
truckful trucksful truckfuls

Compound nouns ending in a preposition

When the compound is formed with a noun and a preposition, (e.g. passer-by = a person who passes you by in the street), the plural is formed by adding an 's' to the noun -- NOT AT THE END.

Compound Noun Plural
passer-by passers-by
hanger-on hangers-on

But notice the word grown-up: it's plural is grown-ups, with 's' at the end. This is because "grown" is not a noun, it's a verb (grow - grew - grown). That's why the 's' is at the end.

With this in mind, do this exercise:

Compound nouns