
Hyphens
The Oxford Manual of Style once stated, “If you take hyphens seriously, you will surely go mad.” Hyphens belong to that category of punctuation marks that will hurt your brain if you think about them too hard, and, like commas, people disagree about their use in certain situations. Nevertheless, you will have to use them regularly because of the nature of academic and professional writing.
The hyphen’s function
Fundamentally, the hyphen is a joiner. It can join several different types of things:
- two nouns to make one complete word (kilogram-meter)
- an adjective and a noun to make a compound word (accident-prone)
- two words that, when linked, describe a noun (agreed-upon sum, two-dimensional object)
- a prefix with a noun (un-American)
- double numbers (twenty-four)
- numbers and units describing a noun (1000-foot face; a 10-meter difference)
- “self” words (self-employed, self-esteem)
- new word blends (cancer-causing, cost-effective)
- prefixes and suffixes to words, in particular when the writer wants to avoid doubling a vowel or tripling a consonant (anti-inflammatory; shell-like)
- multiple adjectives with the same noun (blue- and yellow-green beads; four- and five-year-olds)
As you become attuned to proper hyphenation practices, you will recognize where hyphens fit best.
Properly Used Hyphens
By convention, hyphens are not used after words ending in –ly, nor when the words are so commonly used in combination that no ambiguity results. So, for example, above, we use no hyphen when discussing properly used hyphens.
small-scale study | two-prong plug | strength-to-weight ratio | high-velocity flow | frost-free lawn |
self-employed worker | one-third majority | coarse-grained wood | decision-making process | blue-green algae |
air-ice interface | silver-stained cells | protein-calorie malnutrition | membrane-bound vesicles | phase-contrast microscope |
long-term-payment loan | cost-effective program | time-dependent variable | radiation-sensitive sample | long-chain fatty acid |
When Hyphens Are Not Needed
By convention, hyphens are not used after words ending in –ly, nor when the words are so commonly used in combination that no ambiguity results. So, for example, above, we use no hyphen when discussing properly used hyphens.
finely tuned engine | blood pressure | sea level |
real estate | census taker | atomic energy |
civil rights law | public utility plant | carbon dioxide |
- She is a well-known person.
- The actor in the series is a well-known bodybuilder.
- She is well known.
- As she becomes more well known, her Instagram following will probably increase.
Prefixes and Suffixes
Most prefixes do not need to be hyphenated; they are simply added in front of a noun, with no spaces and no joining punctuation necessary.
Prefixes
The following is a list of common prefixes that do not require hyphenation when added to a noun:
after | anti | bi | bio | co |
cyber | di | down | hetero | homo |
infra | inter | macro | micro | mini |
non | photo | poly | stereo | thermo |
When prefixes are added to a proper noun, they require a hyphen (e.g., nonviolent, but non-European).
- resign (leave a position) v. re-sign (sign the paper again)
- recreation (an activity of leisure) v. re-creation (create something again)
Common suffixes also do not require hyphenation, assuming no ambiguities of spelling or pronunciation arise. Typically, you do not need to hyphenate words ending in the following suffixes:
able | less | fold | like | wise |
Ambiguities of spelling or pronunciation are exceptions.
Her face is bell-like. (Using an “l” three times in a row would be messy).
Commonly Used Word Blends
Also, especially in technical fields, some words commonly used in succession become joined into one. The resulting word’s meaning is readily understood by technical readers, and no hyphen is necessary.
Word blends
Here are some examples of such word blends, typically written as single words:
blackbody | groundwater | airship |
downdraft | longwall | upload |
setup | runoff | blowout |