While we bow to the elegance of the em-dash (hats off to you, lovely madam) and admire the skillful writer who knows how to employ the unicorn that is the en-dash (a very special mark, learn more about his charms here), the commonplace hyphen is everywhere and nowhere, a generic entity oft subbed for the real thing (i.e., the em- or en-dash), used willy-nilly, thrown in when one feels like it, as if it's salt or pepper being added to a stew. (As per the above.). Be the first to answer this question. Hyphens—not to be confused with dashes—are a part of some compound words. She was a well versed woman in the art of conversation. MLA | Merriam-Webster | The New York Times. The word 'well' is an adverb modifying the adjective 'versed'.

Those of us reading (and the one of us writing) this post likely have especially strong opinions about the essential yet mundane (not to us!) It should not just be added -- added --- added - and the reader then tasked with making heads or tails of it, too-salty, not-enough-seasoning, simply-wrong.

And anyway, sometimes good people make bad hyphen mistakes. Likewise, that "Elvis like character" you keep running into in Vegas who serenades you and your "sister in law" "every-time" you see him; he needs help. Manual of Style and Usage specify that if the meaning is clear, a hyphen On the other (soul-scraping) side of hyphenation is when necessary hyphens get left out. This is the universally accepted use of the hyphen. (Anti-American, pre-Civil War, mid-1980s, and T-shirt, for a few additional examples.) It's Spider-Man, which the courageous people of Twitter are reminding people daily. Full-time. So, instead of just slapping a hyphen in between car and port, do a check. Sometimes you need them. Hyphens. This is all well and good and highly enjoyable; who doesn't love waxing poetic over an ellipses, or wondering what the exclamation point does when it's not on the road, traveling with the band? or "What a beautifully-hewn artisanal handicraft!" Your "sexcrazed friend" is really sex-crazed, though he or she might not like to hear you say it. a compound word has a space, a hyphen, or neither depends on common usage All Rights Reserved. "Use a hyphen to avoid confusion or an awkward … (As per the above.) topic of punctuation. What do you know? Give it a few years and that hyphen will be toast, and don't even try to convince me on "on-line.") Note: The AP Grammatical pet peeves are the secret joys, the sour candies, of every former and current copy editor, though probably even those of us who've never proofed a page in an official capacity have them too. Fortunately, many of us online don't have to worry about bad breaks, though Purdue goes into that, too. ---------------. It's too sad to consider. TheAtlantic.com Copyright (c) 2020 by The Atlantic Monthly Group. Oh, the em-dash, the em-dash, the em-dash! *No hyphens were harmed in the making of this post. Ano ang pinagkaiba ng komunikasyon noon at ngayon? Well-versed.

Traduções principais: Inglês: Português: well versed, well-versed adj adjective: Describes a noun or pronoun--for example, "a tall girl," "an interesting book," "a big house."

The, Hyphenate compound numbers.

He added, to our grave sorrow, "I don't have specific examples handy of bad hyphenating or resulting fisticuffs, but it is a sort of partisan issue!".

(very knowledgeable about)
Let's take a minute to get Grammar-Real: It has come to my attention of late that many of us are using hyphens wrong. Register to get answer. For instance, with adverbs that end in ly.

Answer. Copyright © 2020 Multiply Media, LLC.
a part of some compound words.

Those of us without hyphens in our names get a plus-one at the hyphen dance.