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		Ask for help > Using number expressions     
			
		 Using number expressions 
		
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 juliamontenegro
 
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							| Using number expressions 
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							| Hey guys,   I kinda need some help here...   First of all consider the sentence:     A TV set that costs two hundred dollars.   Should it be written:     A two-hundred dollar TV set. or     A two-hundred-dollar TV set?   I need help finding explanation and exercises about this grammar topic but I really don �t recall any other way to call this except Compound Modifiers.   I have searched eslprintables for ws on Compound Modifiers but haven �t found anything. What �s the other way this topic might have been refered to?   Thanks in advance,   Julia |  26 Aug 2009      
					
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 Tere-arg
 
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							| For me: 
 A two-hundred-dollar TV set
 
 A twelve-year-old girl.
 
 A ten-ton lorry.
 
 ....in only one word -always singular- as it is acting as a "compound adjective".
 
 
 
 
 |  26 Aug 2009     
					
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 mena22
 
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							| Hi julia! According to the rule, singular forms are used as modifiers before nouns in plural measuring expressions: a five-pound note;   six two-hour lessons; a three-month-old baby  (Michael Swan, Practical English Usage), so the second sentence should be the correct one: "a two-hundred-dollar TV set."   Have a good night. mena |  26 Aug 2009     
					
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 serene
 
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							| Hi Julia You might find these helpful: Hugs serene |  26 Aug 2009     
					
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 marwan380
 
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							| dea one: I think the second sentence is the correct . this is a compound adjective, and in compound adjective all the words should be hyphened. I wii give an example. I have seen a horse-mouthed girl. o.k? |  26 Aug 2009     
					
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 juliamontenegro
 
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							| As the first sentence is "the sentence" on the sts text book, is there a possibility two-hundred is modifying the word dollar? I kind of don�t see a lot of change in the sentence as I�ve seen in some book examples.   By the way, thank you all so much and serene, I�ll check those links right away. :)  |  26 Aug 2009     
					
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