Using hyphen to avoid repeating a word
I'm not sure if the construct has a name in English, but I would submit some examples that work similarly.
- In talking about red blood cells and white blood cells, I would simply say, "red and white blood cells".
- To put forward an example using hyphens, describing a living situation as either on-campus or off-campus (relative to a university, for example) could be summarized as, "on and/or off-campus".
As a note to the last example above, I opted to not include the hyphen when writing out "on" (e.g. "on- and/or off-campus"). Although it may just be a personal preference, I can't think of a particular example that would maintain the hyphen after the split.
Yes, this is normal in English too. Some examples from a quick search:
- Pre- and post-test probability
- Pre- and post-workout nutrition for runners
- how the pro- and anti-Pegida rallies measured up
In addition to normally-hyphenated phrases, this technique can also be used with words that are normally unhyphenated compounds. For example, one might write about the "inner- and outermost" parts of something.