When Words Get Together
Hyphenated words / hyphenated-words / hyphenatedwords
Here’s a surface-skimming look at the use (or not) of hyphens to join ordinarily separate words.
One of the many delights of the English language is the speed of construction of new words.
Sometimes a three-part evolution takes place:
book mark / book-mark / bookmark 
court room / court-room / courtroom 
blackjack 
bumblebee
cashflow 
email 
goodwill 
handbook 
highbrow 
lifeline
 lifestyle 
masterclasses 
pigeonhole 
singsong 
spellchecker 
takeover 
workforce
born-again 
fast-paced 
get-together 
knee-jerk 
rat-race 
sabre-rattling 
shell-like 
slow-blinking 
The need to create hashtags and websites is probably speeding up the fusion of words and the losing of hyphens.
There may be two adjacent occurrences of the same letter but this doesn’t necessarily stop the fusion:
cooperation 
earring 
Sometimes you can tell two words are never going to lose the hyphen, there’s some kind of instinctive aesthetic imperative going on with hat-trick – hattrick just doesn’t look right, does it?
Some prefixes have fused to their stems:
republished 
redrafting
postnatal
proactive
preamble
ongoing
multimedia
mismatch
degrade
redrafting
postnatal
proactive
preamble
ongoing
multimedia
mismatch
degrade
anti-freeze
ex-husband
 in-depth
 pre-school 
Email is increasingly used rather than e-mail, though there’s also e-invoice and I doubt that will ever lose the hyphen (as it would look oddly German?)
Here are some examples where the hyphen (or not) is essential to the meaning:
re-covering / recovering 
re-creation / recreation 
re-laying / relaying 
Three-hundred-year-old trees are an indeterminate number of trees that are 300 years old.
Three hundred-year-old trees are three trees that are 100 years old.
Three hundred year-old trees are 300 trees that are one year old.
Use the Find function under your Edit tab to look for the hyphens you’ve used, and check the lot, giving each one some thought.
Remember a hyphen isn’t a dash – but that’s another story, for a future Proofreading Tip.
Catriona Tippin has been a member of SCBWI since 2006 and helps organise venues for SCBWI North East. Details of her writing and illustrating here. She proofreads study guides, house magazines and publicity material for two national educational charities, in addition to working on a variety of proofreads and copyedits for the growing self-published world. Her monthly column is intended to give you food for thought, remembering “Any correction of the speech or writing of others will contain at least one grammatical, spelling or typographical error” (McKean’s Law, named after its inventor Erin McKean, editor of the Oxford American Dictionary).


I have to confess I'm sometimes in the habit of treating punctuation like hundreds ad thousands - liberally and randomly sprinkling over my work and hyphens along with ellipses are my favourites for that! Ooh and exclamation marks!
ReplyDeleteBut this is a great reference post, Catriona and so interesting so see the development of words - it really is a mating process isn't it?
And sometimes how far the relationship goes really does matter - there's a difference between "the police recovered the stolen sofa" and "the police re-covered the stolen sofa"...
Deletebrilliant
DeleteLooking forward to the hyphen/minus/en dash/em dash article - I still get confused about those!
ReplyDeleteSo gratifying when your word processing program makes some of these decisions for you, isn't it?
DeleteThe possible values have proven to be much better for the students and will favorably bring all those possible instances to follow.
ReplyDelete