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  • Hyphens
    by RT104 at 16:55 on 12 June 2007
    Someone please remind me... I know that 'three year old' (for example) has hyphens ('three-year-old' either when it's used as an adjective but not when it's used as a noun, or else the other way round. But I've forgotten which is which! And can't find ity in any of my grammar/punctuation books. Anyone happen to know?

    Rosy
  • Re: Hyphens
    by debac at 17:03 on 12 June 2007
    I'd tentatively suggest it's being used as an adjective whether you write 'I took my three-year-old to the cinema' or 'I took my three-year-old daughter to have her hair cut'. The first simply omits the noun that the adjective is describing.

    Usually I hyphenate words which are used together as an adjective, because they are not separate adjectives but perform as one adjective when used together.

    In the case where it really is a noun I think usually not hyphenated, but as I say I don't think this is a true example of that. And I wish I could think of a true example of this to make my point.

    I'm basing this on what we did when I sub-edited for two sister magazines. I did write the style guide , but my boss and I would argue and research every point we were unsure of when we put the style guide together, so it had merit.

    Deb
  • Re: Hyphens
    by EmmaD at 17:33 on 12 June 2007
    I'd agree with deb on the general rule - hyphenating when you're joining two words together so they're operating as a single adjective. But I think Deb's right that in 'I tickled my three-year-old, there's a noun 'child' implied, so it's really still being an adjective, and is hyphenated.

    It's the kind of thing a copy editor has to know, but I'm not sure you're obliged to sweat over it if the answer's not easily found.

    Emma
  • Re: Hyphens
    by Account Closed at 18:05 on 12 June 2007
    In New Hart's Rules it gives the example of:

    a two-year-old

    and says use hyphens in spelled out numbers - maybe the hyphen rule you are thinking of refers to other words which aren't numbers.

    Casey x
  • Re: Hyphens
    by EmmaD at 18:15 on 12 June 2007
    Casey, I couldn't find that in Hart - must have been looking in the wrong place.

    Emma
  • Re: Hyphens
    by RT104 at 18:49 on 12 June 2007
    So if Hart says 'a two-year-old' (noun, presumably) then the adjective must be when it's unhyphenated (as in 'a ten year old single malt'!)

    That'll be the way round, then. Thanks! I remember my copy editor explaining it to me last time, but I suddenly couldn't remember which was which...

    R x
  • Re: Hyphens
    by Account Closed at 19:00 on 12 June 2007
    I found it on p 181, Emma, under 'Numbers' - not given as a rule about hyphens, as such.

    No, Rosy, i think what Hart's is saying is that all numbers, if spelt out, are written with hyphens - your copy-editor must have been talking about other hypenated words eg the difference between fancy dress and a fancy-dress party - or whatever - ie not numbers.

    Casey

    <Added>

    so, to my mind, it is

    a ten-year-old

    and

    a ten-year-old malt
  • Re: Hyphens
    by EmmaD at 21:10 on 12 June 2007
    Aha! Thanks Casey, and I'm sure you're right that two-year-old is hyphenated in all circumstances, whether it's a noun for a child, or is describing a whisky.

    Emma

  • Re: Hyphens
    by RT104 at 05:53 on 13 June 2007
    No, I found it, finally, deep in the guidance nortes my copy ed. gave me last time. (The numbers stuff, Casey means thrirty-four and sixty-eight and all that, not stuff with 'year old' in it.) It is as we thought: 'a three-year-old' but 'a three year old child'.

    R x
  • Re: Hyphens
    by Account Closed at 08:30 on 13 June 2007
    hmm, interesting, Hart's Rules gives the example of a '33-year-old-man

    I have to say, i shall follow Hart's, for me, 'three year old child' really doesn't look right.

    Each to their own though

    Casey


    <Added>

    Oops, not an actual hyphen before the word 'man'
  • Re: Hyphens
    by RT104 at 09:15 on 13 June 2007
    How weird. Must be one of those optional things (like no-one and noone) so my guidance notes are just house style.

    R x
  • Re: Hyphens
    by Account Closed at 09:32 on 13 June 2007
    Rosy, i looked into no one and it is actually no one (as far as i've been told!) - Lord, almost every thread opens up a minefield!! Maybe every copy-editor, like you say, is different and has their own little quirks - has your published book got no one, noone or no-one in it??

    And tell me, why do you and i worry about the minutiae when a copy-editor will sort it out? I think many writers suffer from a perfectionist streak!

    Casey x
  • Re: Hyphens
    by Luisa at 10:17 on 13 June 2007
    Don't forget that some of these things are house style and vary from place to place. I've had a different set of copy-editing rules in nearly every place I've worked.
  • Re: Hyphens
    by Account Closed at 10:45 on 13 June 2007
    In other words we are all correct and don't need to worry about it

    Casey
  • Re: Hyphens
    by debac at 11:11 on 13 June 2007
    It is as we thought: 'a three-year-old' but 'a three year old child'

    Rosy, that wasn't what I was saying... or the others I think.

    difference between fancy dress and a fancy-dress party

    That's the perfect example and how I see it, except that (as I said before) 'three-year-old' is not a noun but an adjective for an implied and omitted noun ('child'.

    But as has been said, this is something which your editor can worry about really - more a house style thing than a black and white right or wrong.

    Deb

    <Added>

    Dunno how that winky smiley appeared - it's in the place of simply a closed bracket! Weird.

    <Added>

    Oh - exactly the same happened to Rosy's original msg. Must be a bug.
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