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Using HyphensBrought to you by the Purdue University Online Writing Lab at http://owl.english.purdue.edu For information on dashes and other punctuation, see our handout Semicolons, Parentheses, Dashes, Quotation Marks, and Italics at http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/grammar/g_overvw.html. Two words brought together as a compound may be written separately, written as one word, or connected by hyphens. For example, three modern dictionaries all have the same listings for the following compounds: hair stylist Another modern dictionary, however, lists hairstylist, not hair stylist. Compounding is obviously in a state of flux, and authorities do not always agree in all cases, but the uses of the hyphen offered here are generally agreed upon. 1. Use a hyphen to join two or more words serving as a single adjective before a noun:a one-way street However, when compound modifiers come after a noun, they are not hyphenated: The peanuts were chocolate covered. 2. Use a hyphen with compound numbers:forty-six 3. Use a hyphen to avoid confusion or an awkward combination of letters:re-sign a petition (vs. resign from a job) 4. Use a hyphen with the prefixes ex- (meaning former), self-, all-; with the suffix -elect; between a prefix and a capitalized word; and with figures or letters:ex-husband 5. Use a hyphen to divide words at the end of a line if necessary, and make the break only between syllables:pref-er-ence For line breaks, divide already hyphenated words only at the hyphen: mass-produced For line breaks in words ending in -ing, if a single final consonant in the root word is doubled before the suffix, hyphenate between the consonants; otherwise, hyphenate at the suffix itself: plan-ning Never put the first or last letter of a word at the end or beginning of a line, and don't put two-letter suffixes at the beginning of a new line: lovely (Do not separate to leave ly beginning a new line.) |
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The following information must remain intact on every handout printed for distribution. This page is located at http://owl.english.purdue.edu/handouts/print/grammar/g_hyphen.html Copyright ©1995-2004 by OWL at Purdue
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