Hyphen Rules
Hyphen Rules
It is often confused with dashes ( –, —, ― ), which are longer and have different uses, and
with the minus sign ( − ) which is also longer.
Rule One:
Most often, you will hyphenate between two or more adjectives when they come before a
noun and act as a single idea. This is the most common use of the hyphen.
Rule Two:
When adverbs not ending in –ly are used as compound words in front of a noun, hyphenate the
words. When the combination of words is used after the noun, do not hyphenate the words.
Rule Three:
To check whether a compound noun is two words, one word, or hyphenated, you will want to
look it up in the dictionary. If you can’t find the word in the dictionary, treat the noun as
separate words.
Rule Five:
Compound verbs are either hyphenated or appear as one word. If you do not find the verb
in the dictionary, hyphenate it.
Rule Six:
Remember to use a comma, and not a hyphen, between two adjectives when you could
have used and instead.
Rule Seven:
Hyphenate all compound numbers from twenty-one through ninety-nine.
Rule Eight:
Hyphenate all spelled-out fractions.
More than one-half of the student body voted for removing soda
machines from campus.