hyphens!
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Hyphens!. UWF Writing Laboratory Mini-Lesson #67 51/158474-2029. 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?. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
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Hyphens!
UWF Writing LaboratoryMini-Lesson #67
51/158 474-2029
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Which two words in the above sentence should be combined with a hyphen?
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.
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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….
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.
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1. 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.”);
2. To separate compounds of equal weight (e.g. male-female relationships);
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:
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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.
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Exceptions1. 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”).
2. Occasionally, hyphens are used to avoid confusion (e.g. “re-solve” instead of “resolve”). Consult a dictionary when you’re in doubt.
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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.
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Remember to differentiate between a hyphen and a dash.
HYPHEN (to separate words)-
DASH (to separate sentences)--