How To Remove The Yellow Stain From...
Food & Drink2 mins ago
No best answer has yet been selected by AngloScot. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Length!
Seriously, the function of a hyphen, which used to be the shorter of the two, is to link and that of a dash is more commonly to separate (but see below). In British English at least, we still tend to use a hyphen between closely-tied words...eg 'dining' and 'room' become 'dining-room'. Americans, on the other hand, are throwing the hyphen out wholesale, so we probably will soon as well.
The dash tends to be used, for example, to separate a heading from its subsequent list. "For a successful camping-trip, you require many things - a tent, a stove, a...." It is also used to indicate a span, as in "Numbers 21-29"...to show joint names, as in "US-British trade"...to indicate parenthesis, as in "What is happening - he believes - is..."
For a fuller explanation, in British English hyphens are used as follows:
a. to join two or more words to form a single expression, such as �up-to-date'
b. to join certain prefixes to names, such as �anti-European'
c. to prevent misunderstandings...eg �twenty-odd politicians' does not mean the same thing as �twenty odd politicians'. The first means �between 20 and 30 politicians' and the second means �exactly 20 politicians...but peculiar ones'
d. to avoid ambiguity...eg we �recover' from an illness but we �re-cover' a settee
e. to separate similar letters/sounds...eg �co-operate'
f. to stand for a common element that will appear later...eg �two-, three-, or fourfold'
g. to link word-parts at the end/beginning of printed lines...eg �colon-isation', where there was insufficient room to get the whole word onto the line.
The dash is used as follows:
a. to show a span such as Nos 1-5
b. to indicate a period of time such as 1990-1995
c. between linked places...the Paris-Marseilles train
d. between the names of people jointly responsible for something to indicate that it is not a single, hyphenated name...the Mason-Dixon Line
e. to act as parenthesis...The answer is - he contends - greater investment
f. to precede an explanation...I had met John - indeed he was to become a close friend.