The word
"hyphenated" refers to a compound word that is connected by a hyphen (-). It is used to combine two or more words together to create a new word or a phrase.
Full definition
I enjoy Flower of Scotland, but... The «black British» point and the absence of «black English» from public discourse is not intended as a demand
for hyphenated identities or any official categorisation, though I can see how it could be read as that.
Trivia question: what was the last episode
of Hyphenates in which everyone was in the same room for the recording?
Haney points out that many people get married, or they start using
hyphenated names.
David Duchovny makes his feature - length
hyphenate debut with the appropriately - named House of D, a slog through Duchovny's Freudian undercarriage as he casts himself as a goateed Parisian flipbook artist and wife Téa Leoni as his character's mother in flashback — with pre-Duchovny played by a game Anton Yelchin, riding around on a meat wagon in 1973 Greenwich Village, the bitch to Robin Williams's retard bull.
Often with new
hyphenated words (like e-learning) as the word becomes ubiquitous in society and enters the popular vernacular the hyphen is eventually dropped.
But do
n't hyphenate phrasal verbs, that is, where you've combined a verb and adverb or proposition (words to describe the verb).
It interrogates the notion of
hyphenated identity, in particular «Russian - Jewish,» and presents the «Russian Avant - garde» as situated at a point of tension between universality and ethnic particularity.
(Note: In the case of Dan Sarofian - Butin, whose last name changed this year due to marriage, we agreed to a request and used his newly
hyphenated last name for Ed Press, Web and Newspaper Mentions.)
Regular visitors to this site will be familiar with its house philosophy, which goes by the unlovely, but oddly memorable, name of «and theory» (which I think is more easily read
in hyphenated form i.e. and - theory.
Supplementary updates include more text being able to be displayed on ePub ebooks and
new hyphenating text features.
Almost all words prefixed with «non» are NOT hyphenated [Chicago Manual of Style].
For more than three centuries, we have welcomed generations of immigrants to our melting pot of
hyphenated America British - Americans Italian - Americans.
Then you need the Hell Is For
Hyphenates Cheat Sheet: we program you a double feature that will not only make for a great evening's viewing, but will bring you suitably up - to - speed before our next episode lands...
Theodore Bernstein, John Trimble, R.W. Burchfield, Patricia T. O'Conner, and Bill Walsh also advise following a bright - line rule for
hyphenating most phrasal adjectives because, as Garner summarizes, the hyphens make reading faster and easier:
He describes himself in the poly -
hyphenated terms of today's culturally and socially engaged artists as Nigerian - American - Artist - Engineer - DJ - Designer, to name but a few aspects of his identity.
by Walter Chaw Much will be written about Robert Forster's performance in Diamond Men, Dan Cohen's sophomore
hyphenate feature, and as Forster lands an executive producer credit (daughter Kate gets the «associate producer» tag), the veteran actor's much - deserved critical buzz this time around is a product more of design than serendipity.
Child's name change: On August 12, 2013, the NJ Supreme Court ruled in Emma v. Evans on a request by a mother who, after the divorce,
started hyphenating the parties» two young children's surname (with her birth name to which she returned following the divorce listed first, followed by the father's -LSB-...]
Michael Crichton belongs to a select group of
Hollywood hyphenates: the Producer - Writer - Director.
Many of those senior scientists — the ones guarding the gates — were trained as staunch disciplinarians, and they take seriously what they see as their obligation to keep out the barbarians who would water down standards and compromise the institution in the name of the
latest hyphenated buzzword.
Hyphenate David Michael O'Neill's Five Aces is another in that long - standing tradition of pseudo-nostalgic man - sensitive buddy flicks, this one free of the stultifying voice - over narration but not of the contracted timeframe and forced epiphanies.
Beginning with an airplane landing and ending with another taking off, Patrick Stettner's sterling feature -
length hyphenate debut boasts of a surprising maturity both in terms of its narrative completeness and the consistency of its photographic compositions.
He admitted to not feeling quite right about Digital Book World's
current hyphenated -LSB-...]
They had decided to
hyphenate because — and in spite — of all the usual reasons but mostly so their firstborn could have his grandfather's name without sounding too presidential, which seemed to his parents like a lot of pressure for a six - pound, two - ounce, brand - new tiny human.
But do
hyphenate if you are using said phrasal verb as a noun.
For example, if you have
sometimes hyphenated a phrase and sometimes not («short - term» versus «short term») it will point this out to you.
In
becoming hyphenated Jews — German - Jews, Dutch - Jews, French - Jews — they ran the risk of losing their Jewish identity by assimilation.
You all know that these fun and fabulous fabric pumpkins are sooooooo trending this season and guess what???? Holly from Coconut Head's Survival Guide is sharing the DIY for these perfect pumpkins and as a BONUS... they are No - Sew... the
best hyphenated word on the planet!!!! Check them out and make your very own Fabric Pumpkin Patch!
After taking some time off from directing and scriptwriting to appear in such films as Out of Sight (1998), Brooks resumed his director - screenwriter -
actor hyphenate with The Muse (1999), starring opposite Andie MacDowell and Sharon Stone as a struggling Hollywood scriptwriter in search of divine inspiration; Looking for Comedy in the Muslim World followed in 2005.
But, as with all achievements, these were simply a prelude to life's greatest pinnacle: Hell Is For
Hyphenates guest host.
HIS ROYAL
HYPHENATE Michael Douglas interviewed by David Thomson Michael Douglas, son of Kirk, did it his way and paid his dues.
Gates had dropped out of Harvard, and the two had formed a company called Micro-Soft (
originally hyphenated).
In modern AA literature, the disease concept is
frequently hyphenated — «dis - ease» — to convey disharmony with reality.
[3] Christopher Duraisingh, «
Indian Hyphenated Christians and Theological Reflections: A New Expression of Identity,» Religion and Society, Vol.
I became a Jewish Radical, one of the
many hyphenated rebels of that tumultuous time.
Unlike many of college basketball's nouveau riche, those alphabet - soup and
hyphenated leagues that are inhabited by institutions of higher learning previously sniffed out only by police dogs, the Big East from the git - go incorporated a bunch of traditional powers sitting there just panting to group - boogie.
The prefix «eco» is much with us these days, beginning with ecology and moving on to
such hyphenated pretensions as eco-chains, eco-systems, eco-worlds, eco-thought and even eco-journalism.
If your only argument
against hyphenated names is that you can't figure out how they work, then maybe you should stick to what you know and comment on the topic at hand.