hanging hyphens

   Share on Facebook  
Anonymous  #448024  Fri, 30 Nov 07 02:31 AM

Accordingly, George Orwell's sixth rule of effective writing was to "Break any of [the previous five] rules sooner than say anything outright barbarous."

I believe that this is fairly barbarous in style terms:

"Contrary to popular belief, creative tendencies are evenly spread throughout right- and left-handed populations."

I prefer:

"Contrary to popular belief, creative tendencies are evenly spread throughout right and left-handed populations."

So I've checked out a few style guides (the few that are available online) and can't seem to find any support for the view! Does anyone know of any authority to back me up when I say I'd much rather omit the hanging/suspended/dangling hyphen?

I know in most circumstances I could rearrange the sentence to avoid the issue, but in this case I'm talking trancript, so it has to be as the person said it.

Thanks,
Tom

  
Mister Micawber  #448096  Fri, 30 Nov 07 06:18 AM

in this case I'm talking trancript, so it has to be as the person said it.

Well the person did not use any punctuation at all when they said it, Tom, so I see no reason to flout custom.  The hyphen is usual there in careful writing; otherwise, it reads as 'right populations and left-handed populations'.

  
Top 10 Contributor
Joined on Wed, Aug 4 2004
Yokohama
Veteran Member (21,223)
SystemAdministratorTeachers
'The question is,' said Humpty Dumpty, 'which is to be master-- that's all.'
Annvan  #450624  Fri, 07 Dec 07 09:13 AM
From 'Fowler's Modern English Usage' (Publ.: Oxford University Press):

"... 'Both four- and six-cylinder models are made.' The function of a hyphen is to link a word with its immediate neighbour, and to separate them in this way to avoid doubling the linked word is a clumsy device that should be avoided if possible; which is the lesser evil is a matter of taste in each case..."
  
Top 150 Contributor
Joined on Mon, Sep 4 2006
The Philippines
Regular Member (600)
Proficient Speaker
AddThis Feed Button RSS Feed: ESL Linguistics Discussion Forum
© 2008 MediaCET Ltd.
Terms and Conditions & Terms of Service