Tuesday, October 22, 2019
How to Use a Dash
How to Use a Dash          The dash (- )à  is a mark of punctuationà  used to set off a word or phrase after an independent clause or a parenthetical remark (words, phrases, or clauses that interrupt a sentence). Dont confuse the dash (- ) with the hyphen (-): the dash is longer. As William Strunk Jr. and E.B. White explained in The Elements of Style:         Aà  dashà  is a mark of separation stronger than aà  Ã¢â¬â¹comma, less formal than aà  colon, and more relaxed thanà  Ã¢â¬â¹parentheses.         There are actually two types of dashes, each with different uses: theà  em dash- also called the long dash, according to Oxford Online Dictionaries- and theà  en dash, which doesnt have another name but falls between the hyphen and em dash in terms of length.à  Theà  en dashà  is so named because it is approximately the equivalent width of the uppercase letterà  Nà  and theà  em dashà  is roughly the width of an uppercaseà  M.          Origins      Merriam-Webster says the wordà  dashà  comes from theà  Middle English wordà  dasshen, which probably derives from the Middle French termà  dachier,à  meaning to impel forward. One current definition of the wordà  dashà  is to break, which would well describe what a dash does in syntax.         Theà  Online Etymology Dictionaryà  says the dash- a horizontal line used as a punctuation mark- first appeared in writing and printing in the 1550s. By the late 1800s, the dash had taken on some very specific roles. According toà  Thomas MacKellar, in his 1885 book, The American Printer: A Manual of Typography :         The em dash...is frequently used in particular works as a substitute for the comma or for the colon, and is found particularly serviceable in rhapsodical writing, where interrupted sentences frequently occur.         à  MacKellar noted several specific uses for the dash, including:         A sign of repetition in catalogs of goods, where it meansà  ditto.In catalogs of books, where it was used instead of repeating an authors name.As a stand-in for the wordsà  toà  andà  till, as in chap. xvi. 13-17.         The last use would today be anà  en dash, which indicates a range.          The En Dash      Though the Associated Press does not use theà  en dash, the press service nicely describes how other stylesà  doà  use the shorter dash.à  Some other styles call forà  en dashesà  to indicate ranges of dates, times, or page numbers, or with some compound modifiers. For example:         He worked from 9ââ¬â5.à  She works from 8 a.m.ââ¬â5 p.m.The festival will take place March 15ââ¬â31.For your homework, read pages 49ââ¬â64.         To create anà  en dashà  using a keyboard on a Windows-based system, hold down the Alt key and simultaneously type 0150. To create this punctuation mark on aà  Macintosh-based systemà  hold down the Optionà  keyà  and press the Minus keyà  [-].à  American Psychological Association notes that you would use theà  en dashà  for:         Items of equal weight (testââ¬âretest, maleââ¬âfemale, the Chicagoââ¬âLondon flight).Page ranges (in references, ââ¬Å"...Journal of Applied Psychology,à  86, 718ââ¬â729â⬠).Other types of ranges (16ââ¬â30 kHz).         Angela Gibson, writing for the MLA Style Center, a writing resource for the Modern Languages Association, says the organization uses an en dash when a single compound adjective is a proper noun, as in:         Preââ¬âIndustrial Revolution city.         She notes that the MLA also calls for anà  en dash when a compound in the predicate position includes a proper noun:         The crowd was Beyoncà © Knowlesââ¬âobsessed.          The Em Dash      The AP, which does useà  em dashes, explains that these punctuation marks areà  used:         To signal an abrupt change.To set off a series within a phrase.Before attribution to an author or composer in some formats.After datelines.To start lists.         AP style calls for a space on both sides of anà  emà  dash, but most other styles, including MLA and APA, omit the spaces. On a Windows-based system, you can form anà  em dashà  on a keyboard by holding down the Alt key and typingà  Ã¢â¬â¹0151. To create the em dash on a Macintosh-based system, hold down theà  Shiftà  andà  Optionà  keys and press theà  Minusà  key [-], notesà  Techwalla, adding that alternatively, you can press theà  Hyphenà  key twice and pressà  Space.         There are two basic ways to use anà  em dashà  in a sentence:         After an independent clause: Author Saul Below, in My Paris, provides an example of using anà  em dashà  after an independent clause:         Life, said Samuel Butler, is like giving a concert on the violin while learning to play the instrument- that, friends, is real wisdom.         To set off words and phrases:à  Writers have effectively usedà  em dashesà  to shoehorn a parenthetical thought or remark into a sentence, as this quote illustrates:         Copper Lincoln cents- pale zinc-coated steel for a year in the war- figure in my earliest impressions of money.- John Updike, A Sense of Change,à  The New Yorker, April 26, 1999          Thoughts on the Dash      For a tiny punctuation mark, the dash has sparked an unusual level of debate among writers, grammarians, and punctuation experts. The dash is seductive, says Ernest Gowers in The Complete Plain Words, a style, grammar, and punctuation reference guide. It tempts the writer to use it as a punctuation-maid-of-all-work that saves him the trouble of choosing the right stop. Some have expressed support for the dash:         The dash is less formal than the semicolon, which makes it more attractive; it enhances conversational tone; and...it is capable of quite subtle effects. The main reason people use it, however, is that they know you cant use it wrongly.- Lynne Truss, Eats, Shoots  Leaves         Other writers strenuously oppose using the mark:         The problem with theà  dash- as you may have noticed!- is that it discourages truly efficient writing. It also- and this might be its worst sin- disrupts the flow of a sentence. Dont you find it annoying- and you can tell me if you do, I wont be hurt- when a writer inserts a thought into the midst of another one thats not yet complete?- Norene Malone, The Case- Please Hear Me Out- Against the Em Dash.à  Slate, May 24, 2011         So, next time you look in your toolkit of punctuation marks and see theà  en dashà  orà  em dashà  just waiting to be put to work, ensure that you are using these marks for the right reasons and following the rules discussed. Ask yourself if yourà  parenthetical remarkà  will add nuance and insight to your writing or just confuse the reader. If its the latter, return the dashes to your punctuation tool bag and use a comma, colon, or semicolon instead, or revise the sentence so that you can omit the dreaded dash.          Source      Gowers, Ernest. Plain Words: A Guide to the Use of English. Rebecca Gowers, Paperback, Penguin UK, October 1, 2015.    
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