Ask Me Anything

Intermediate (B1) 30 minutes
ESL Compound Nouns Activity preview for Intermediate B1 showing gap-fill, question prompts, and pair/group practice

ESL Compound Nouns Activity - Vocabulary and Speaking: Gap-Fill, Asking and Answering Questions, Controlled and Freer Practice - Group and Pair Work

In this fun compound nouns speaking activity, students complete questions with one word to make closed compound nouns. Students then ask and answer the questions...

ESL Compound Nouns Activity - Vocabulary and Speaking: Gap-Fill, Asking and Answering Questions, Controlled and Freer Practice - Group and Pair Work In this fun compound nouns speaking activity, students complete questions with one word to make closed compound nouns. Students then ask and answer the questions with a partner. In two groups, students complete each question on the worksheet with one word to make a compound noun. Next, students write down one or two follow-up questions for each item. Students then pair up with someone from the other group and take it in turns to ask and answer the questions with their partner. Finally, students report back to the class on what they found out about their partner.

Compound Noun Dominoes

Intermediate (B1) 25 minutes
ESL Compound Nouns Game preview for Intermediate B1 showing domino matching and group sentence practice

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary and Speaking: Matching, Forming Sentences, Freer Practice - Group Work

In this inventive compound nouns game, students combine words together to form compound nouns and use them in sentences. The first player puts down one of their dominoes on either side of...

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary and Speaking: Matching, Forming Sentences, Freer Practice - Group Work In this inventive compound nouns game, students combine words together to form compound nouns and use them in sentences. The first player puts down one of their dominoes on either side of the domino on the table, making sure that the words combine to form a compound noun. If the player forms a compound noun successfully, they score a point. For an extra point, the player then uses the compound noun in a sentence. The other players then take it in turns to match their dominoes in the same way by putting them down at either end of the domino chain and making a suitable sentence when a compound noun is formed. When a player has gotten rid of all their dominoes, the game ends. The player with the most points wins the game. Finally, go through the compound nouns and elicit the compound elements for each one, e.g. noun + noun, noun + verb, etc.

Picture it

Intermediate (B1) 25 minutes
ESL Compound Nouns Game preview for Intermediate B1 showing drawing, guessing, and word formation group activity

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary: Drawing, Guessing, Forming Words - Group Work

In this entertaining compound nouns drawing game, students guess compound nouns from pictures. One student from Team A comes up to the board. Give the student a card containing two words that...

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary: Drawing, Guessing, Forming Words - Group Work In this entertaining compound nouns drawing game, students guess compound nouns from pictures. One student from Team A comes up to the board. Give the student a card containing two words that when joined together form a compound noun. The student then draws the two words on the board. The first team to guess the compound noun wins and scores a point. For an extra point, the team then defines the compound noun. If the team is unable to define the word, the other team can steal the point by giving a correct definition. Then, a student from Team B comes to the board and so on. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins. As an alternative, instead of asking for a definition, you could ask teams to tell you the compound elements or use the compound noun in a sentence.

Practice Makes Perfect

Intermediate (B1) 25 minutes
ESL Compound Nouns Worksheet preview for Intermediate B1 showing labelling, matching, gap-fill, and sentence writing

ESL Compound Nouns Worksheet - Vocabulary Exercises: Labelling, Matching, Gap-fill, Writing Sentences

This productive compound nouns worksheet helps students learn and practice a variety of compound nouns and their compound elements. Students begin by looking at pictures and completing...

ESL Compound Nouns Worksheet - Vocabulary Exercises: Labelling, Matching, Gap-fill, Writing Sentences This productive compound nouns worksheet helps students learn and practice a variety of compound nouns and their compound elements. Students begin by looking at pictures and completing compound nouns with words from a box. Students then match each compound noun with its compound elements. Next, students complete sentences with suitable compound nouns from Exercise A. Students then move on to match words together to make compound nouns and write the compound elements for each one. In the last exercise, students write a sentence about each picture using a compound noun.

Same Same

Intermediate (B1) 30 minutes
ESL Compound Nouns Game preview for Intermediate B1 showing word formation and group competition

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary: Forming Words - Group Work

In this free compound nouns game, students race to create as many compound nouns as they can from specific words. You begin the game by picking up a card and calling out the word in bold, e.g. hair. In teams, students then race to write down as many...

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary: Forming Words - Group Work In this free compound nouns game, students race to create as many compound nouns as they can from specific words. You begin the game by picking up a card and calling out the word in bold, e.g. hair. In teams, students then race to write down as many compound nouns as they can think of using the word, e.g. hairbrush, hairdresser, haircut, hairstyle, etc. When a time limit has been reached (e.g. one minute), the teams stop writing and swap papers for marking. For each suitable compound noun that is not on your card, teams score a point. If a team has a compound noun that is on your card, they score two points. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.

Compound Conundrum

Upper-intermediate (B2) 30 minutes
ESL Compound Noun Game preview for Upper-intermediate B2 showing pelmanism, matching, and pair sentence practice

ESL Compound Noun Game - Vocabulary and Speaking: Pelmanism, Matching, Forming Sentences, Freer Practice - Pair Work

This imaginative compound nouns game helps students develop their vocabulary knowledge by matching words together to form compound nouns and using them in sentences. In pairs, students...

ESL Compound Noun Game - Vocabulary and Speaking: Pelmanism, Matching, Forming Sentences, Freer Practice - Pair Work This imaginative compound nouns game helps students develop their vocabulary knowledge by matching words together to form compound nouns and using them in sentences. In pairs, students take it in turns to turn over one card from each set. If the two words match to make a compound noun, the student scores a point. The student can then score an extra point by making a sentence with the compound noun. The student then keeps the cards. If the student is able to make a suitable sentence, they have another turn. If not, play passes to the other student. The student with the most points at the end of the game wins.

Nouns Modifying Nouns

Upper-intermediate (B2) 30 minutes
ESL Nouns Modifying Nouns Worksheet preview for Upper-intermediate with identifying, writing definitions, collocations, and gap-fill

ESL Nouns Modifying Nouns Worksheet - Vocabulary Exercises: Identifying, Writing Definitions, Forming Collocations, Gap-fill

This comprehensive noun-noun phrases worksheet helps students learn and practice how to modify nouns with other nouns. These noun-noun collocations are sometimes called noun adjuncts or qualifying...

ESL Nouns Modifying Nouns Worksheet - Vocabulary Exercises: Identifying, Writing Definitions, Forming Collocations, Gap-fill This comprehensive noun-noun phrases worksheet helps students learn and practice how to modify nouns with other nouns. These noun-noun collocations are sometimes called noun adjuncts or qualifying nouns. Students begin by circling phrases containing two nouns and rewriting them in other words. After that, students write three nouns that can modify different nouns. Next, students use nouns from a box to complete sentences with noun-noun phrases. Finally, students complete chains of noun collocations with nouns from a box.

What's the Compound Noun?

Upper-intermediate (B2) 50 minutes
ESL Compound Nouns Game preview for Upper-intermediate B2 showing forming definitions and group guessing

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary: Forming Definitions, Guessing - Group Work

In this creative compound nouns game, students define compound nouns using certain words and guess compound nouns from another team's descriptions. First, teams look at their cards and think about how they can define each compound...

ESL Compound Nouns Game - Vocabulary: Forming Definitions, Guessing - Group Work In this creative compound nouns game, students define compound nouns using certain words and guess compound nouns from another team's descriptions. First, teams look at their cards and think about how they can define each compound noun by using the words on the cards or variations of the words. Teams then take it in turns to pick up a card and define the compound noun to the other team, starting with the compound elements. The opposing team has one minute to listen to the description and guess the compound noun. If the opposing team manages to guess the compound noun before the time limit has been reached, they win and keep the card. If not, the defining team wins and keeps the card. The team with the most cards at the end of the game wins.

Understanding Compound Nouns

Compound nouns combine two or more words to create a single new meaning and can be written as one word, two words, or with a hyphen, as in 'toothbrush,' 'bus stop,' or 'dry-cleaning.' There is no reliable rule for which written form a compound takes, so students need to learn each one as a fixed unit, and guessing wrong produces a form that a reader will immediately notice.

This page covers compound nouns at Intermediate and Upper-intermediate levels, with eight resources including worksheets, drawing and guessing games, a domino game, and a speaking activity, one of which is available as a free download.

The table shows the most common patterns for forming compound nouns in English, with an example of each pattern and a note on whether the compound is typically written as one word, two words, or hyphenated.

Formation PatternStructureExampleWritten Form
Noun + Noun (closed) noun + noun sunflower One word: 'a sunflower'
Noun + Noun (open) noun + noun car park Two words: 'a car park'
Adjective + Noun adjective + noun blackboard One word: 'a blackboard'
Verb + Noun verb + noun washing machine Two words: 'a washing machine'
Noun + Verb noun + verb sunrise One word: 'a sunrise'
Verb + Preposition verb + preposition checkout One word: 'a checkout'
Preposition + Noun preposition + noun underground One word: 'the underground'

When to Use Compound Nouns

Naming New Concepts and Technologies: English constantly creates compound nouns to name new technologies and concepts because combining two familiar words is the quickest way to give something a precise, recognizable name, as in 'smartphone,' 'laptop,' and 'inbox,' where the parts together signal a meaning neither word carries alone.

Workplace and Professional Vocabulary: Professional environments rely heavily on compound nouns to describe roles, processes, and locations efficiently, so a worker needs to know whether to say 'deadline,' 'workflow,' or 'meeting room' rather than reaching for a longer descriptive phrase each time.

Signposting in Formal and Academic Writing: Academic and formal writers use compound nouns as concise labels for complex ideas, allowing a phrase like 'case study,' 'feedback loop,' or 'decision-making process' to carry a precise shared meaning without needing further explanation each time it appears.

3-Step Framework for Teaching Compound Nouns

1. Build Recognition and Form Through Structured Practice: Start with a worksheet that moves students from recognition to production in clear stages. Students look at pictures and complete compound nouns by choosing words from a box, then match each compound noun with its compound elements to make the internal structure visible. After gap-fill practice, they finish by writing a sentence about each picture using a compound noun, so every stage connects form to meaning.

2. Bring the Structure to Life With a Drawing Game: Follow up with a whole-class drawing game that makes compound noun formation visual and competitive. One student draws two separate words on the board and the first team to shout out the compound noun scores a point. A correct definition earns the team an extra point, but if they cannot define it, the other team can steal that point, which keeps every team alert even when it is not their turn.

3. Push Productive Knowledge With a Definition Challenge: At upper-intermediate level, push students to show they truly own the vocabulary by asking them to define compound nouns rather than just recognize them. Teams pick up a card and define the compound noun to the opposing team, starting with the compound elements. The opposing team has one minute to guess, and whichever team wins the exchange keeps the card, so the pressure stays on both sides of the room at once.

Common Mistakes with Compound Nouns

Writing a Closed Compound as Two Separate Words: Students often write a compound noun as two words when it should be one, typically because the component words look like they belong in a regular noun phrase. Wrong: 'She left her tooth brush in the hotel.' Correct: 'She left her toothbrush in the hotel.'

Pluralizing the First Element of a Compound Noun: Students often add a plural -s to the first word in a compound noun, following the logic of a regular noun phrase rather than the compound noun rule. Wrong: 'She works in the cars industry.' Correct: 'She works in the car industry.'

Common Questions About Teaching Compound Nouns

What is an engaging game for practicing compound nouns?

In the free game Same Same, the teacher calls out a word such as 'hair' and teams race to write as many compound nouns as they can using that word, for example 'hairbrush,' 'hairdresser,' or 'haircut.' Teams score one point for each compound noun not on the teacher's card and two points for any that match.

What is a good speaking activity for practicing compound nouns?

Students in the activity Ask Me Anything complete conversation questions with one word to form a closed compound noun, then write one or two follow-up questions for each. They pair up with someone from the other group to ask and answer the questions, then report back to the class what they found out about their partner.

What is a useful worksheet for teaching compound nouns?

The worksheet Practice Makes Perfect takes students through five stages, from recognizing compound nouns in pictures to producing them in sentences. Students complete compound nouns with words from a box, match each compound noun to its compound elements, complete gap-fill sentences, match words to make new compound nouns, and finish by writing a sentence about each picture.

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