hyphenated compound with 3 words

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psychohomik

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Apr 4, 2014
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Hello,

my question concerns a compound word consisting of three elements: "collective", "action", and "driven". I would like to use it as a modifier in the sentence, and I have no idea, if there should be just one (collective action-driven) or two (collective-action-driven) hyphens.
Many thanks for your response in advance!

psychohomik
 
Welcome to the forum.

Post the sentence you are having problems with and we can try to help you out.
 
"Intergroup contact reduces support for collective-action-driven social change"
 
I suggest you change it to "social change driven by collective actions."

However, I don't know what you mean by that phrase.
 
I agree with Barb. It looks like you're trying to use the absolute minimum numbers of words possible; and by doing so, you're obscuring the meaning. Do you mean that contact between groups actually reduces the tendency for groups to participate in collective social action for change? I would have thought it would increase it.
 
You will see more than three words hyphenated sometimes,but it can make it difficult to read- a hard-to-get-your-head-around sentence. Often a simple reordering can make it easier to get your head around the sentence. :up:
 
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