Heidi
Why is ‘Iron Man’ two-word but ‘Batman’ one-word? Thanks
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الإجابات · 5
Thanks
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As Jon said, just the comic book creators’ stylistic choice. Then there’s Spider-Man that has a hyphen!
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I agree with the stylism, it serves two purposes: it gives him a name and describes him in one, hes an iron man not just a person Ironman, its emphasis on the fact he is literally in a metal suit.
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Interesting question! I'm not going to put this as an "answer", but after some thought it seems to me that it's simply the author's choice. "Iron man" is adjective+noun, just like "super man", who is really "Superman" - although with superheroes there does seem to be a tendency to keep adjectives separate. The Green Lantern, Green Arrow. But I would say it's a stylistic thing. "Batman" is noun+noun, just like "Wonder Woman"... who is always spelt as two words. "Aquaman" is one, "Danger Mouse" is two, "Bananaman" is one ... I think it's probably just stylistic choice.
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Iron man = adjective + noun Batman = noun + noun
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