Hyphens

Jared Aragona

Hyphens: Use a hyphen to connect compound nouns or compound adjectives that come before nouns.  Do not use hyphens with compound adjectives that come after nouns.

Use a hyphen to connect compound adjectives that come before nouns

They went to a well-traveled trail that was too crowded.

She ate a plant-based diet for the entire year.

 

Do not use a hyphen when the compound adjective comes after the noun.

The guidebook was right about the trail being well traveled.

Every item in her pantry was plant based.

 

Use a hyphen to connect compound nouns.

His comic book featured a beast known as the man-pig.

My father-in-law knows how to perform taxidermy.

 

Use a hyphen to connect numbers and fractions.

When Abraham turned fifty-five, he decided it was time to marry.

My DNA test showed that I’m one-eighth East Asian.

 

Use a hyphen to connect prefixes like self-, all-, and ex- to their root words.

Francis needed to build his self-esteem before he could wear those pants.

His ex-wife dangled the car keys in front of his face.

Mark never stopped his quest for the all-powerful coffee bean.

 

The MLCKRB (Master List Code Key and Rule Book): An English Grammar & Style Handbook by Jared Aragona, CC BY 4.0

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Hyphens Copyright © by Jared Aragona is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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