Using hyphens to connect words to the same meaning (conjunction?)Enumeration with 'and'Relative Clause Extraction from Subordinate Clause - Compare and Contrast These SentencesWriting two sentences or using “which” as a conjunctionMeaning of traditionallyCan this subject be implied or does it need to be explicit?How do you explain the usage of “with”?Using “had” vs “have” in conjunction with “previous”“I had a choice between something AND/OR something else”Can we continue saying “that” after “resulted in”?Using the conjunction “as” to express similarity

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Using hyphens to connect words to the same meaning (conjunction?)


Enumeration with 'and'Relative Clause Extraction from Subordinate Clause - Compare and Contrast These SentencesWriting two sentences or using “which” as a conjunctionMeaning of traditionallyCan this subject be implied or does it need to be explicit?How do you explain the usage of “with”?Using “had” vs “have” in conjunction with “previous”“I had a choice between something AND/OR something else”Can we continue saying “that” after “resulted in”?Using the conjunction “as” to express similarity













0















I had a debate at work, over which thing would be considered the most correct way of writing the following (English):



"The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



or



"The company offers engineering-, retail- and architectural services"



I am from Denmark, and in Danish we use the second approach which connects










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    The suspended hyphens would only make sense if you used architectural-services. But you didn't. You can't suspend the use of a hyphen and then never follow through with its use in the final phrase.

    – Jason Bassford
    Feb 24 at 7:48











  • The second approach is wrong. Normal adjectives do not require hyphenation.

    – Lambie
    26 mins ago















0















I had a debate at work, over which thing would be considered the most correct way of writing the following (English):



"The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



or



"The company offers engineering-, retail- and architectural services"



I am from Denmark, and in Danish we use the second approach which connects










share|improve this question

















  • 1





    The suspended hyphens would only make sense if you used architectural-services. But you didn't. You can't suspend the use of a hyphen and then never follow through with its use in the final phrase.

    – Jason Bassford
    Feb 24 at 7:48











  • The second approach is wrong. Normal adjectives do not require hyphenation.

    – Lambie
    26 mins ago













0












0








0








I had a debate at work, over which thing would be considered the most correct way of writing the following (English):



"The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



or



"The company offers engineering-, retail- and architectural services"



I am from Denmark, and in Danish we use the second approach which connects










share|improve this question














I had a debate at work, over which thing would be considered the most correct way of writing the following (English):



"The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



or



"The company offers engineering-, retail- and architectural services"



I am from Denmark, and in Danish we use the second approach which connects







grammar conjunctions






share|improve this question













share|improve this question











share|improve this question




share|improve this question










asked Feb 23 at 16:00









PhilipPhilip

11




11







  • 1





    The suspended hyphens would only make sense if you used architectural-services. But you didn't. You can't suspend the use of a hyphen and then never follow through with its use in the final phrase.

    – Jason Bassford
    Feb 24 at 7:48











  • The second approach is wrong. Normal adjectives do not require hyphenation.

    – Lambie
    26 mins ago












  • 1





    The suspended hyphens would only make sense if you used architectural-services. But you didn't. You can't suspend the use of a hyphen and then never follow through with its use in the final phrase.

    – Jason Bassford
    Feb 24 at 7:48











  • The second approach is wrong. Normal adjectives do not require hyphenation.

    – Lambie
    26 mins ago







1




1





The suspended hyphens would only make sense if you used architectural-services. But you didn't. You can't suspend the use of a hyphen and then never follow through with its use in the final phrase.

– Jason Bassford
Feb 24 at 7:48





The suspended hyphens would only make sense if you used architectural-services. But you didn't. You can't suspend the use of a hyphen and then never follow through with its use in the final phrase.

– Jason Bassford
Feb 24 at 7:48













The second approach is wrong. Normal adjectives do not require hyphenation.

– Lambie
26 mins ago





The second approach is wrong. Normal adjectives do not require hyphenation.

– Lambie
26 mins ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















1














In English, it is definitely the former (the version without the hyphens) that is correct; the latter is not. Engineering and retail are here complete, stand-alone words; the use of hyphens would wrongly imply that they are prefixes in some compounds that are either hyphenated or spelled closed.



It would be correct to use hyphens in, for example, 'The vegetables should be neither under- nor overcooked' or 'Both pre- and post-production took a long time'; this is because in the first example under- stands for undercooked, and in the second pre- stands for pre-production.






share|improve this answer

























  • My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

    – Lambie
    28 mins ago



















0














You can preposition almost any reasonable number of adjectives that are just regular adjectives. There is no need for hyphens:



"The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



However, hyphenation happens like this:




Some trees bear fruit and others bear nuts.



Becomes: fruit- and nut-bearing trees.



Very often, there are two or three nouns connected to the same verb.
This calls for hyphenation in the adjectival form to avoid repetition.




It is understood that what follows the first hyphen is implied. It is the same as the gerund in the second, but it is left out. When spoken (as in when someone reads a text, their intonation will carry this meaning.)



An example with three hyphens:




Ideas based on tradition, culture and history



tradition-, culture- and history-based ideas.




Or a more technical example:




a generator can be powered by wind, electricity or water



wind-, electricity and water-powered generators




To be noted: how it is the verb that structures the hyphenation.






share|improve this answer






















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    2 Answers
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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    1














    In English, it is definitely the former (the version without the hyphens) that is correct; the latter is not. Engineering and retail are here complete, stand-alone words; the use of hyphens would wrongly imply that they are prefixes in some compounds that are either hyphenated or spelled closed.



    It would be correct to use hyphens in, for example, 'The vegetables should be neither under- nor overcooked' or 'Both pre- and post-production took a long time'; this is because in the first example under- stands for undercooked, and in the second pre- stands for pre-production.






    share|improve this answer

























    • My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

      – Lambie
      28 mins ago
















    1














    In English, it is definitely the former (the version without the hyphens) that is correct; the latter is not. Engineering and retail are here complete, stand-alone words; the use of hyphens would wrongly imply that they are prefixes in some compounds that are either hyphenated or spelled closed.



    It would be correct to use hyphens in, for example, 'The vegetables should be neither under- nor overcooked' or 'Both pre- and post-production took a long time'; this is because in the first example under- stands for undercooked, and in the second pre- stands for pre-production.






    share|improve this answer

























    • My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

      – Lambie
      28 mins ago














    1












    1








    1







    In English, it is definitely the former (the version without the hyphens) that is correct; the latter is not. Engineering and retail are here complete, stand-alone words; the use of hyphens would wrongly imply that they are prefixes in some compounds that are either hyphenated or spelled closed.



    It would be correct to use hyphens in, for example, 'The vegetables should be neither under- nor overcooked' or 'Both pre- and post-production took a long time'; this is because in the first example under- stands for undercooked, and in the second pre- stands for pre-production.






    share|improve this answer















    In English, it is definitely the former (the version without the hyphens) that is correct; the latter is not. Engineering and retail are here complete, stand-alone words; the use of hyphens would wrongly imply that they are prefixes in some compounds that are either hyphenated or spelled closed.



    It would be correct to use hyphens in, for example, 'The vegetables should be neither under- nor overcooked' or 'Both pre- and post-production took a long time'; this is because in the first example under- stands for undercooked, and in the second pre- stands for pre-production.







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Feb 24 at 17:15

























    answered Feb 23 at 22:31









    jsw29jsw29

    1,228418




    1,228418












    • My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

      – Lambie
      28 mins ago


















    • My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

      – Lambie
      28 mins ago

















    My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

    – Lambie
    28 mins ago






    My only issue here is that overcook and undercook are words in their own right. That's a special case,I'd say.

    – Lambie
    28 mins ago














    0














    You can preposition almost any reasonable number of adjectives that are just regular adjectives. There is no need for hyphens:



    "The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



    However, hyphenation happens like this:




    Some trees bear fruit and others bear nuts.



    Becomes: fruit- and nut-bearing trees.



    Very often, there are two or three nouns connected to the same verb.
    This calls for hyphenation in the adjectival form to avoid repetition.




    It is understood that what follows the first hyphen is implied. It is the same as the gerund in the second, but it is left out. When spoken (as in when someone reads a text, their intonation will carry this meaning.)



    An example with three hyphens:




    Ideas based on tradition, culture and history



    tradition-, culture- and history-based ideas.




    Or a more technical example:




    a generator can be powered by wind, electricity or water



    wind-, electricity and water-powered generators




    To be noted: how it is the verb that structures the hyphenation.






    share|improve this answer



























      0














      You can preposition almost any reasonable number of adjectives that are just regular adjectives. There is no need for hyphens:



      "The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



      However, hyphenation happens like this:




      Some trees bear fruit and others bear nuts.



      Becomes: fruit- and nut-bearing trees.



      Very often, there are two or three nouns connected to the same verb.
      This calls for hyphenation in the adjectival form to avoid repetition.




      It is understood that what follows the first hyphen is implied. It is the same as the gerund in the second, but it is left out. When spoken (as in when someone reads a text, their intonation will carry this meaning.)



      An example with three hyphens:




      Ideas based on tradition, culture and history



      tradition-, culture- and history-based ideas.




      Or a more technical example:




      a generator can be powered by wind, electricity or water



      wind-, electricity and water-powered generators




      To be noted: how it is the verb that structures the hyphenation.






      share|improve this answer

























        0












        0








        0







        You can preposition almost any reasonable number of adjectives that are just regular adjectives. There is no need for hyphens:



        "The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



        However, hyphenation happens like this:




        Some trees bear fruit and others bear nuts.



        Becomes: fruit- and nut-bearing trees.



        Very often, there are two or three nouns connected to the same verb.
        This calls for hyphenation in the adjectival form to avoid repetition.




        It is understood that what follows the first hyphen is implied. It is the same as the gerund in the second, but it is left out. When spoken (as in when someone reads a text, their intonation will carry this meaning.)



        An example with three hyphens:




        Ideas based on tradition, culture and history



        tradition-, culture- and history-based ideas.




        Or a more technical example:




        a generator can be powered by wind, electricity or water



        wind-, electricity and water-powered generators




        To be noted: how it is the verb that structures the hyphenation.






        share|improve this answer













        You can preposition almost any reasonable number of adjectives that are just regular adjectives. There is no need for hyphens:



        "The company offers engineering, retail and architectural services"



        However, hyphenation happens like this:




        Some trees bear fruit and others bear nuts.



        Becomes: fruit- and nut-bearing trees.



        Very often, there are two or three nouns connected to the same verb.
        This calls for hyphenation in the adjectival form to avoid repetition.




        It is understood that what follows the first hyphen is implied. It is the same as the gerund in the second, but it is left out. When spoken (as in when someone reads a text, their intonation will carry this meaning.)



        An example with three hyphens:




        Ideas based on tradition, culture and history



        tradition-, culture- and history-based ideas.




        Or a more technical example:




        a generator can be powered by wind, electricity or water



        wind-, electricity and water-powered generators




        To be noted: how it is the verb that structures the hyphenation.







        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered 2 hours ago









        LambieLambie

        7,5011933




        7,5011933



























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