1 / 8

Hyphens!

Hyphens!. UWF Writing Laboratory Mini-Lesson #67 51/158 474-2029. I am giving you a sign up sheet to distribute so that students interested in attending the play can sign up and reserve a seat. Which two words in the above sentence should be combined with a hyphen?.

nita-coffey
Télécharger la présentation

Hyphens!

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Hyphens! UWF Writing Laboratory Mini-Lesson #67 51/158 474-2029

  2. I am giving you a sign up sheet to distribute so that students interested in attending the play can sign up and reserve a seat. Which two words in the above sentence should be combined with a hyphen?

  3. I am giving you a sign up sheet to distribute so that students interested in attending the play can sign up and reserve a seat. Which two words in the above sentence should be combined with a hyphen? RIGHT! “sign” and “up” Without the hyphen, the reader may be momentarily derailed. The sentence seems to read as follows: I am giving you a sign….

  4. The hyphen is most commonly used to separate a word that is divided by the right hand margin, but a hyphen also has the following conventional uses: • To separate the parts of a compound modifier or multiword adjective when the modifier/ adjective precedes the word that it modifies (e.g. “When he is out of town, he uses out-of-town checks.”); • To separate compounds of equal weight (e.g. male-female relationships);

  5. 3. To set off prefixes of words beginning with the prefixes well-, all-, self-, and ex- (e.g. “all-purpose,” “ex-wife,” “well- informed,” and “self-centered”); 4. To set off some compound nouns (e.g. “mother-in-law”) or to set off prefixes before a proper noun or adjective (e.g. “all-American”); 5. To separate numbers from twenty-one to ninety-nine and fractions such as two-thirds.

  6. Exceptions • Do not hyphenate words that begin with the prefixes pre-, un-, re-, inter-, non-, multi-, bi-, semi-, up-, over-, and intra (e.g. “preschool,” “rearrange,” “overworked,” “intercollegiate,” “multicultural,” “bipartisan,” nonviolent, bipartisan, and “semisweet”). • Occasionally, hyphens are used to avoid confusion (e.g. “re-solve” instead of “resolve”). Consult a dictionary when you’re in doubt.

  7. Practice! Air traffic was so dense that afternoon that air traffic control could hardly cope. Air traffic was so dense that afternoon that air-traffic control could hardly cope. Nancy’s exhusband is an antifeminist. Nancy’s ex-husband is an antifeminist. My mother in law works for a quasi official corporation that does two thirds of its business with the government. My mother-in-law works for a quasi-official corporation that does two-thirds of its business with the government.

  8. Remember to differentiate between a hyphen and a dash. HYPHEN (to separate words) - DASH (to separate sentences) --

More Related