hyphenation rules as per chicago manual (nikhil roshan)
DESCRIPTION
There are some of the points for hyphenation in the editing process.TRANSCRIPT
Hyphenation for BooksHyphenation for Books
Hyphens have several uses.
a. Creating compound words, particularly modifiers before nouns (the well-known actor, my six-year-old daughter, the out-of-date curriculum.
b. Writing numbers twenty-one to ninety-nine and fractions (five-eighths, one-fourth).
c. Creating compounds on-the-fly for fly-by-night organizations.d. Adding certain prefixes to words: When a prefix comes before a
capitalized word or the prefix is capitalized, use a hyphen (non-English, A-frame, I-formation). The prefixes self-, all-, and ex- nearly always require a hyphen (ex-husband, all-inclusive, self-control), and when the prefix ends with the same letter that begins the word, you will often use a hyphen (anti-intellectual, de-emphasize), but not always (unnatural, coordinate, cooperate). By all means, use a good dictionary when in doubt.
There is no space between a hyphen and the character on either side of
it.
Suspended Compounds
With a series of nearly identical compounds, we sometimes delay the
final term of the final term until the last instance, allowing the hyphen to act
as a kind of place holder, as in
The third- and fourth-grade teachers met with the parents. Both full- and part-time employees will get raises this year. We don't see many 3-, 4-, and 5-year-old children around here.
Be careful not to overuse this feature of the hyphen; readers have to wait
until that final instance to know what you're talking about, and that can be
annoying.
NIKHIL KR. ‘ROSHAN’