Dictionary Definition
hyphen n : a punctuation mark (-) used between
parts of a compound word or between the syllables of a word when
the word is divided at the end of a line of text [syn: dash] v : divide or connect with a
hyphen; "hyphenate these words and names" [syn: hyphenate]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Pronunciation
- Rhymes with: --aɪfən
Etymology
From , from ὑφέν.Noun
- Symbol "-", typically used to join two related words to form a compound noun, or to indicate that a word has been split at the end of a line.
Related terms
Translations
symbol used to join words or to indicate a word
has been split
- Chinese: 连字号 (lián zì hào)
- Czech: spojovník
- Danish: bindestreg
- Dutch: koppelteken , verbindingsstreepje
- Finnish: tavuviiva, yhdysmerkki, yhdysviiva, väliviiva
- French: trait d'union
- Greek: ενωτικό
- German: Bindestrich
- Interlingua: tracto de union
- Italian: trattino
- Korean: 붙임표
- Norwegian: bindestrek
- Polish: dywiz , łącznik
- Portuguese: hífen , traço-de-união
- Romanian: liniuţă
- Russian: дефис
- Slovak: pomlčka
- Spanish: guión
- Swedish: bindestreck, divis
See also
- dash
- minus, minus sign
- ־ (Hebrew maqaf)
Extensive Definition
A hyphen ( - ) is a punctuation mark. It is used
both to join words and to
separate syllables. It
is often confused with the dashes
( –, —, ― ), which are longer and have different functions, and
with the minus sign ( −
) which is also longer. The use of hyphens is called
hyphenation.
Customs of usage in English
Hyphens are most commonly used to break single
words into parts, or to join ordinarily separate words into single
words.
A definitive collection of hyphenation rules does
not exist. Therefore, the writer or editor should consult a
manual
of style or dictionary of his or her
preference, preferably for the country in which he or she is
writing. The rules of style that apply to dashes and hyphens have
evolved to support ease of reading in complex constructions;
editors often accept deviations from them that will support, rather
than hinder, ease of reading. Spaces should not be placed between a
hyphen and either of the words it connects except when using a
suspended hyphen (e.g. nineteenth- and twentieth-century
writers—see below).
The use of the hyphen in compound nouns and verbs
has, in general, been steadily declining. Compounds that might once
have been hyphenated are increasingly left with spaces or are
combined into one word. The sixth edition of the Shorter Oxford
English Dictionary removed the hyphens from 16,000 entries, such as
fig-leaf (now fig leaf), pot-belly (now pot belly) and pigeon-hole
(now pigeonhole). In other countries hyphens are dropped in favor
of connecting the two-word compounds. Use of the hyphen is
particularly avoided by those concerned with visual cleanliness,
for example writers of advertising copy, packaging
labels etc.
However, a significant number of compounds are
still routinely hyphenated (e.g. breast-feed, add-on (noun),
get-together, Hewlett-Packard, merry-go-round). Hyphenation remains
the norm in certain compound modifier constructions and, amongst
some authors, with certain prefixes (see below). Hyphenation is
also routinely used to avoid unsightly spacing in justified texts
(for example, in newspaper columns).
Separating
Justification and line-wrapping
To allow more efficient usage of paper, more
regular appearance of right-side margins without requiring spacing
adjustments, and to eliminate the need to erase hand-written long
words begun near the end of a line that do not fit, words may be
divided at the nearest breakpoint between syllables and a hyphen
inserted to indicate that the letters form a word fragment, not a
word. For example:
The details of doing this properly are complex
and language-dependent and can interact with other orthographic
and typesetting
practices: see justification
and hyphenation
algorithm. Such hyphenation
algorithms, when employed in concert with dictionaries, are
sufficient for all but the most formal texts.
Prefixes and suffixes
In general, prefixes and suffixes are affixed to
another word. Certain prefixes (co-, pre-, mid-, de-, non-, anti-,
etc.) are often improperly hyphenated, though usage varies between
American
and British
English. British English tends towards hyphenation (pre-school)
whereas American English tends towards omission of the hyphen
(preschool). A hyphen is mandatory when a prefix is applied to a
proper (capitalized) adjective (un-American,
de-Stalinisation).
In British English, hyphens may be employed where
readers would otherwise be tempted into a mispronunciation (e.g.
co-worker is so punctuated partly to prevent the reader's eye being
caught automatically by the word cow). The AP Stylebook
provides further information on the use of "co-" as a prefix.
Hyphens may be used, in association with
prefixes, suffixes or otherwise, when repeated vowels or consonants
are pronounced separately rather than being silent or merged in a
diphthong. For
example: shell-like, anti-intellectual. In the vowel-vowel case,
some English authorities use a diaeresis (as in coöperation,
rather than co-operation or cooperation), but this style is now
rare.
Some prefixed words are hyphenated to distinguish
them from other words that would otherwise be homographs, such as recreation (fun or sport) and
re‑creation
(the act of creating again), or predate (what a predator does) and
pre‑date (to be of an earlier calendar
date).
Syllabification and spelling
Hyphens are occasionally used to denote syllabification, as in
syl-lab-i-fi-ca-tion. Most American dictionaries use an interpunct, sometimes called
a "middle dot" or "hyphenation point", for this purpose, as in
syl·lab·i·fi·ca·tion. Similarly, hyphens may be used to imply the
spelling of a word, such as "W-O-R-D spells word".
Joining
Compound modifiers
Compound
modifiers are groups of two or more words that jointly modify
the meaning of another word. When a compound modifier, other than a
noun–noun or adverb–adjective combination, appears
before a term, the compound modifier is generally hyphenated to
prevent any possible misunderstanding, such as in American-football
player or real-world example. Without the hyphen, there is
potential confusion about whether American applies to football or
player, or whether the author might perhaps be referring to a
"world example" that is "real". Compound modifiers can extend to
three or more words, as in ice-cream-flavored candy, and can be
adverbial as well as adjectival (spine-tinglingly
frightening).
When the same combination of words follows the
term it applies to, hyphens may or may not be required, depending
on how "tightly bound" the compound is felt to be.
Noun–adjective compounds are likely to require a hyphen.
For example: American-football player / a player of American
football and real-world example / an example from the real world,
but time-sensitive documents / the documents are time-sensitive and
left-handed catch / he took the catch left-handed.
Hyphens are not normally used in noun–noun
compound modifiers, when no confusion is possible; for example:
government standards organization and department store
manager.
Hyphens should not normally be used in
adverb–adjective modifiers such as wholly owned
subsidiary and quickly moving vehicle (because the adverbs clearly
modify the adjectives; "quickly" does not apply to "vehicle" as
"quickly vehicle" would be meaningless). However, if the adverb can
also function as an adjective, then a hyphen may be required for
clarity. For example, the phrase more-important reasons ("reasons
that are more important") is distinguished from more important
reasons ("additional important reasons"), where more is an
adjective. A mass-noun
example is the following: more-beautiful scenery as distinct from
more beautiful scenery. Other examples are well-received speech and
hard-won fight.
Hyphens are used to connect numbers and words in
forming adjectival phrases (particularly with weights and
measures), whether numerals or written out, as in 28-year-old woman
(cf. twenty-eight-year-old woman) or 320-foot wingspan. The
SI recommends
against this practice when using abbreviated metric units. The same
usually holds for abbreviated time units. Hyphens are also used in
spelled-out fractions
as adjectives (but not as nouns), such as two-thirds majority and
one-eighth portion.
Where an adjective–noun compound would be plural
standing alone, it usually becomes singular and hyphenated when
modifying another noun. For example, four days becomes four-day
week.
An en dash (
– ) sometimes replaces the hyphen in hyphenated compounds
if either of its constituent parts is already hyphenated or
contains a space (e.g. high-priority–high-pressure tasks (tasks
which are both high-priority and high-pressure). Many people use
hyphens where en dashes are more properly used, in ranges (pp.
312–14), relationships (blood–brain barrier) and to convey the
sense of to (Boston–Washington
race).
Other compounds
Connecting hyphens are used in a large number of
miscellaneous compounds, other than modifiers, such as in
lily-of-the-valley, cock-a-hoop, clever-clever, tittle-tattle and
orang-utan. Usage is often dictated by convention rather than fixed
rules, and hyphenation styles may vary between authors; for
example, orang-utan is also written as orangutan or orang utan, and
lily-of-the-valley may or may not be hyphenated.
Two-word names of numbers less than one hundred
are hyphenated. For instance, the number 23 should be written
twenty-three, and 123 should be written one hundred and
twenty-three. (The and is omitted in American English.)
Some married couples compose a new surname (sometimes referred to
as a double-barrelled
name) for their new family by combining their two surnames with
a hyphen. Jane Doe and
John
Smith might become Jane and John Smith-Doe, or Doe-Smith, for
instance. In some countries, however, only the woman hyphenates her
birth surname, appending her husband's surname.
Suspended hyphens
A suspended hyphen (also referred to as a
"hanging hyphen" or "dangling hyphen") may be used when a single
base word is used with separate, consecutive, hyphenated words
which are connected by "and", "or", or "to". For example,
nineteenth-century and twentieth-century may be written as
nineteenth- and twentieth-century. This usage is derived from that
of German,
which uses a dangling hyphen when the second word is unhyphenated,
e.g., Die Lumpen- und Arbeiterproletariaten.
Other uses
A hyphen may be used to connect groups of
numbers, such as in dates (see below), telephone numbers or sports
scores.
The hyphen is sometimes used to hide letters in
words, as in G-d.
Examples of usage
Some strong examples of semantic changes caused
by the placement of hyphens:
- disease-causing poor nutrition, meaning poor nutrition that causes disease
- disease causing poor nutrition, meaning a disease that causes poor nutrition
- a man-eating shark is a shark that eats humans
- a man eating shark is a man who is eating shark meat
- a blue green sea is a contradiction
- a blue-green sea is a sea whose colour is somewhere between blue and green
Additional examples of proper use:
- text-only document or the document is text-only
- Detroit-based organization or the organization is Detroit-based
- state-of-the-art product or the product is state-of-the-art (but The state of the art is very advanced. with no hyphen)
- board-certified strategy or the strategy is board-certified
- thought-provoking argument or the argument is thought-provoking
- time-sensitive error or the error is time-sensitive
- case-sensitive password or the password is case-sensitive
- government-issued photo ID or the photo ID is government-issued (but …is issued by the government with no hyphen.)
- light-gathering surface or the surface is light-gathering
- award-winning novel or the novel is award-winning (but, more likely, …won an award with no hyphen)
- web-based encyclopedia or the encyclopedia is web-based
- fun-loving person or the person is fun-loving
- how to wire-transfer funds
- how to tax-plan
- advertising-supported service or service is advertising-supported (but, better, …is supported by advertising with no hyphen.)
- Rudolph Giuliani is an Italian-American (but see hyphenated American)
- list of China-related topics …list of topics is China-related (but …related to China with no hyphen)
- out-of-body experience
- near-death experience
- in surnames, for example Dominique Strauss-Kahn
Note, though, that many authoritative sources,
such as the Chicago
Manual of Style, recommend writing commonplace compounds open
(i.e., without hyphen) when they appear after the noun they modify
and when they are used adverbially. Thus
- She always wears out-of-date clothes.
- Her wardrobe is out of date.
- The hand-to-hand combat was frightful.
- They fought hand to hand in repulsing the attack.
Origin and history of the hyphen
The likely first use of the hyphen—and its
origination—ought to be credited to Johannes
Gutenberg of Mainz, Germany circa 1455 with the publication of
his 42-line Bible.
Examination of an original copy on vellum (Hubay index #35) in the
U. S.
Library of Congress shows that Gutenberg's movable type was set
justified in a uniform style, 42 equal lines per page.
Prior to Gutenberg setting the first lines
printed in the Western world with movable type, there was no need
for hyphens or the justification of lines to equal length. The
Gutenberg printing press required words made up of individual
letters of type to be held in place by a surrounding non-printing
rigid frame. Gutenberg solved the problem of making each line the
same length to fit the frame by inserting a hyphen as the last
element at the right side margin. This interrupted the letters in
the last word, requiring the remaining letters be carried over to
the start of the line below. His hyphen appears throughout the
Bible as a short, double line inclined to the right at a 60-degree
angle.
In medieval times and the early days of printing,
the predecessor of the comma was a slash.
As the hyphen ought not to be confused with this, a double-slash
was used, this resembling an equals sign
tilted like a slash. Writing forms changed with time, and included
the full development of the comma, so the hyphen could become one
horizontal stroke.
However, publishers of dictionaries liked that a
tilted symbol would give them a little extra room in their books.
Those dictionaries based on the second edition of the Merriam-Webster
dictionary used one small, slightly tilted slash for a hyphen which
they added at the end of a line where they broke the word, but used
a double-slash, much like the very old symbol, to indicate a hyphen
that was actually a part of the phrase but just happened to fall at
the end of the line. This double-slash would be used in hyphenated
phrases in the middle of the text as well, so that there would be
no confusion.
Hyphens in computing
In the ASCII character
encoding, the hyphen was encoded as character 45. Technically,
this character is called the hyphen-minus,
as it is also used as the minus sign and for dashes.
In Unicode,
this same character is encoded as
( - ) so that Unicode remains
compatible with ASCII. However, Unicode also encodes the hyphen and
minus separately, as U+2010 ( ‐ ) and
U+2212 ( − ), respectively, along with
a series of dashes. Use of the hyphen-minus character is
discouraged where possible, in favour of the specific hyphen
character. Nevertheless, since the Unicode hyphen is awkward to
enter on normal keyboards, the hyphen-minus character remains
extremely common. Hyphens are often used instead of dashes in
situations where proper dash characters are unavailable (such as
ASCII-only text) or difficult to enter, or when the writer is
unaware of the difference. Some writers use two hyphens (--) to
represent a dash in ASCII text.
When flowing text, it is sometimes preferable to
break a word in half so that it continues on another line rather
than moving the entire word to the next line. Since it is difficult
for a computer program to automatically make good decisions on when
to hyphenate a word the concept of a soft hyphen was introduced to
allow manual specification of a place where a hyphenated break was
allowed without forcing a line break in an inconvenient place if
the text was later reflowed. In contrast, a hyphen that is always
displayed and printed is called a hard hyphen (though some use this
term to refer to a non-breaking hyphen; see below). Soft hyphens
are most useful when the width is known but future editability is
desired, as few would have the patience to put them in at every
place they believed a hyphenated split was acceptable (as would be
needed for their meaningful use on a medium like the Web, however
CSS3 introduces language-specific hyphenation dictionaries which
solves this).
When flowing text, a system may consider the soft
hyphen to be a point at which a word may be broken, and display a
hyphen at the end of the broken line; if the line is not broken at
that point the hyphen is not displayed. In most parts of ISO-8859 the soft
hyphen is at position 0xAD, and since the first
256 positions in Unicode are taken from ISO-8859-1, it
has a Unicode codepoint of U+00AD. In HTML, the soft hyphen
is encoded as the character
entity '­'.
Most text systems consider a hyphen to be a word
boundary and a valid point at which to break a line when flowing
text. However, this is not always desirable behavior, especially
when it could lead to ambiguity (such as in the examples given
before, where recreation and re‑creation would be
indistinguishable). For this purpose, Unicode also encodes a
non-breaking hyphen as U+2011 ( ‑ ).
This character looks identical to the regular hyphen, but is not
treated as a word boundary.
The ASCII hyphen-minus character is also often
used when specifying parameters to programs in a command
line interface. The character is usually followed by one or
more letters that indicate specific actions. Typically it is called
a dash in this context. This is used in many different operating
systems, particularly Unix and Unix-like
systems. DOS
and Microsoft
Windows also sometimes make use of the hyphen, although the use
of a forward slash (/) is more prevalent there. A parameter by
itself that is only a single hyphen without any letters usually
means that a program is supposed to handle data coming from the
standard
input or send data to the standard
output. Two hyphen-minus characters ( -- )
are used on some programs to specify "long options"
where more descriptive action names are used. This is a common
feature of GNU
software.
International Standard dates
Continental Europeans use the
hyphen to delineate parts within a written date. Germans and Slavs
also used Roman
numerals for the month; 14‑VII‑1789, for example, is one way of
writing the first Bastille
Day, though this usage is rapidly falling out of favour.
Plaques on the wall of the Moscow
Kremlin are written this way. Usage of hyphens, as opposed to
the slashes used in the English
language, is specified for international standards.
International
standard ISO 8601, which
was accepted as European Standard EN 28601 and incorporated into
various typographic style guides (e.g., DIN 5008 in Germany),
brought about a new standard using the hyphen. Now all official
European governmental documents use this. These norms prescribe
writing dates using hyphens: 1789-07-14 is the new way of writing
the first Bastille Day.
This method has gained influence within North
America, as most common computer filesystems make the use of
slashes difficult or impossible. Windows uses both \ and / as the
directory separator, and / is also used to introduce and separate
switches to shell commands. Unix-like systems use / as a directory
separator and, while \ is legal in filenames, it is awkward to use
as the shell uses it as an escape character. Unix also uses a space
followed by a hyphen to introduce switches. The non-year form is
also identical apart from the separator used to the standard
American representation.
The ISO date format sorts correctly using a
default collation,
which can be useful in many computing situations including for
filenames, so many computer systems and IT technicians have
switched to this method. The government of the Commonwealth of
Massachusetts,
for example, has switched to this method.
See also
References
- A Grammar Book help for hyphen rules
- Economist Style Guide — Hyphens
- Jukka Korpela, Soft hyphen (SHY) - a hard problem?
- Markus Kuhn, Unicode interpretation of SOFT HYPHEN breaks ISO 8859-1 compatibility. Unicode Technical Committee document L2/03-155R, June 2003.
- Juicio Brennan, Online Lyric Hyphenator (hyphenates English)
- Igor Podlubny, On-line Hyphenator (hyphenates Slovak)
- The United States Government Printing Office Style Manual 2000 6. COMPOUNDING RULES
hyphen in Danish: Bindestreg
hyphen in German:
Viertelgeviertstrich#Bindestrich
hyphen in Spanish: Guión ortográfico
hyphen in French: Trait d'union
hyphen in Hebrew: מקף
hyphen in Hungarian: Kötőjel
hyphen in Italian: Tratto d'unione
hyphen in Japanese: ハイフン
hyphen in Dutch: Liggend streepje
hyphen in Norwegian: Bindestrek
hyphen in Polish: Dywiz
hyphen in Portuguese: Hífen
hyphen in Russian: Дефис
hyphen in Albanian: Anethum
hyphen in Swedish: Divis
hyphen in Thai: ยัติภังค์
hyphen in Walloon: Loyeure
hyphen in Chinese: 连接号