Writing Tip Tuesday: Dashes & Hyphens

Grammar Review

Dashes & HyphensWelcome to Writing Tip Tuesday, the Dashes & Hyphens edition. This is the sixth in a series of posts pulled from my free guide “On Not Writing Badly.” You can download the whole thing by filling out this form, or, if you’d rather not subscribe to my email list, you can simply check back here over the next several Tuesdays for a regular dose of word nerdery.


Dashes & Hyphens

En-dashes

Joins numbers in a range. The en-dash should not be confused with the em-dash, which is slightly longer.

Example: Contestants with numbers 4-12 were called to the next round.


Minus Signs

Used to demonstrate a mathematical equation. It looks the same as an en-dash, but has spaces on either side.

Example: 5 – 3 = 2


Em-dashes

Used like parentheses to pull out an independent phrase, but reserved for phrases of more importance. In most word processing programs, they are a special character. Note that they are about twice as wide as an en-dash.

Example: The group consisted of three men—Jack, Abe, and Zach—who worked in local government.

Note: The em-dash tends to emphasize material, whereas parentheses de-emphasize.


Hyphens

Rule 1: Used to join two or more words that come before the noun they are intended to modify.

Example: An off-campus apartment (use hyphen)

Example: The apartment was off campus. (no hyphen)


Rule 2: Used to tell the ages of people or things when the age is given before the noun.

Example: A two-month-old baby (use hyphen)

Example: The baby was two months old. (no hyphen)


Rule 3: Used to write out numbers under 100 and fractions

Example: Two-thirds

Example: Thirty-six


Words That Should Always Be Hyphenated

Any words using the prefix “ex”: ex-wife, ex-employee, ex-husband

Any words using the prefix “self”: self-doubt, self-evident

Any words using the prefix “all”: all-inclusive, all-around

Any words using the prefix “anti” where the second word starts with an “i”: anti-inflammatory

Any hyphenate where the second word must be capitalized: un-American, non-English

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Published on September 10, 2019 05:00
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