Thursday, November 28, 2019
7 Tips for Using Suspensive Hyphenation
7 Tips for Using Suspensive Hyphenation 7 Tips for Using Suspensive Hyphenation 7 Tips for Using Suspensive Hyphenation By Mark Nichol Often, when both items in a pair of hyphenated phrases have a common element, the first instance of that element can be elided, or omitted, without erasing the connection; the incomplete phrase is implied to have the same form as the complete one. However, as shown in these examples, itââ¬â¢s essential to treat the phrases, especially their hyphens, correctly: 1. ââ¬Å"The holding pondââ¬â¢s collapse sent more than a billion gallons of arsenic and mercury-laden sludge into the river.â⬠The sludge was laden with a combination of arsenic and mercury; arsenic was not released separately from mercury-laden sludge. Because laden can serve to team up with both arsenic and mercury, it is omitted from where it might first appear; the phrase ââ¬Å"arsenic-ladenâ⬠is merely implied. A hyphen is attached to arsenic to express the elision: ââ¬Å"The holding pondââ¬â¢s collapse sent more than a billion gallons of arsenic- and mercury-laden sludge into the river.â⬠2. ââ¬Å"The company provides small- and medium-size businesses with service and support.â⬠The hyphen following small implies that ââ¬Å"small-sizeâ⬠is the intended construction, but size is not appropriate in association with small: ââ¬Å"The company provides small and medium-size businesses with service and support.â⬠3. ââ¬Å"The 1-2 year old wolf is still a baby.â⬠The confusing adjective string before wolf is meant to express that the animal is either a 1-year-old or a 2-year-old. You can write that an animal is 1-2 years old, but here you must hyphenate the construction ââ¬Å"(number)-year-oldâ⬠to modify the noun that follows. The correct full form of the sentence would be ââ¬Å"The 1-year-old to 2-year-old wolf is still a baby,â⬠but the first instance of ââ¬Å"year-oldâ⬠can be elided: ââ¬Å"The 1- to 2-year-old wolf is still a baby.â⬠Note the letter space following 1 this element has no connection to to, so donââ¬â¢t connect them. 4. ââ¬Å"Marc Antony was seen as Cleopatraââ¬â¢s drink-and-love besotted dupe.â⬠The trainlike coupling of ââ¬Å"drink-and-loveâ⬠makes no grammatical sense. Observers thought of Marc Antony as separately besotted by drink and love, so he was a drink-besotted dope and a love-besotted dope, or, as follows: ââ¬Å"Marc Antony was seen as Cleopatraââ¬â¢s drink- and love-besotted dupe.â⬠5. ââ¬Å"The difference between pre- and post-Civil War attitudes was profound.â⬠The elision of ââ¬Å"Civil Warâ⬠after pre- is correct, but when a prefix or suffix is attached (or implied to attach) to a proper noun or to more than one term, a sturdy en dash is called in to substitute for the little hyphen: ââ¬Å"The difference between pre and postCivil War attitudes was profound.â⬠6. ââ¬Å"She felt underpaid and -appreciated.â⬠Though use of suspensive hyphenation in the case of words with otherwise closed prefixes (ââ¬Å"The fund was alternately over- and underfundedâ⬠) is correct, avoid applying it with closed suffixes: ââ¬Å"She felt underpaid and underappreciated.â⬠7. ââ¬Å"The box contained a stack of 3- by 5-inch cards.â⬠By signals that this sentence does not refer to 3-inch cards and 5-inch cards; this statement is in a separate class. When two dimensions refer to a single object, link the entire phrasal adjective together: ââ¬Å"The box contained a stack of 3-by-5-inch cards.â⬠Want to improve your English in five minutes a day? Get a subscription and start receiving our writing tips and exercises daily! Keep learning! Browse the Punctuation category, check our popular posts, or choose a related post below:The Meaning of "To a T"80 Idioms with the Word TimeI wish I were...
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