![]() ![]() Given the economy of space that practically defined typesetting-no ragged edges here-the hyphen became indispensable to typing. Hyphens come standard on typewriters because they were standard for type setters, a practice that traces right back to Gutenberg, who decided to expand their use to also indicate when a word at the end of a line continues onto the following line. The Greeks simply wrote words without punctuation marks or, for that matter, spaces. Punctuation as we understand it is a function of the written word, not language in general, and was a latecomer to the party. It was only when we started hammering these things out of metal rather than drawing them with ink that a proper distinction began to seem important. Before type, there was no need to understand how much longer an em dash was than an en dash, or an en dash than a hyphen it was enough to simply know that they were. ![]() But what do they mean? Why do they look the way they do?Īt some point, when we started typing these marks rather than writing them, their form was standardized. Why is this not impressive? Because Word will do it for you, if you use the correct combination of spaces and hyphens: two hyphens without spaces on either side for an em dash, and a hyphen between spaces for an en dash.īut thinking about dashes got me wondering, in true copy editor fashion, about something more obscure and more pedantic. With this in mind, by far the least impressive skill I have acquired in my time at Leff is the ability to type em dashes and en dashes using the number pad on my keyboard (ALT+0151 and ALT+0150, respectively, if you’re curious). ![]() And we kind of geek out about the many and distinct uses of hyphens, en dashes, and em dashes (and semicolons and commas…). If you’ve perused the Leff blog before, you may have picked up on the fact that we’re big fans of the em dash. ![]()
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