msmemory_archive: (Default)
msmemory_archive ([personal profile] msmemory_archive) wrote2006-09-28 08:25 pm

Grammatical oddity

Something I've seen a few places lately, which really makes me twitch: the hyphenated contraction. I'm talking about did-n't, could-n't, and so forth. Surely not a legitimate usage! Ugh.

(Anonymous) 2006-09-29 02:37 am (UTC)(link)
I haven't seen that (but it looks REALLY weird). One of my professors was writing "binary opposition" on the board today and wrote "bi-nary" which might be legitimate, but I've never seen it before and it looks weird to me.

[identity profile] goldsquare.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 02:38 am (UTC)(link)
Ebonics?
cellio: (writing)

[personal profile] cellio 2006-09-29 02:46 am (UTC)(link)
Weird! Surely not legitimate, IMO.

[identity profile] msmemory.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 03:04 am (UTC)(link)
Surely not. I flagged them in the text I was proofreading.

[identity profile] silme.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 05:54 am (UTC)(link)
No, no, no! Please say that practice isn't becoming accepted. :(

[identity profile] herooftheage.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 06:13 am (UTC)(link)
A funny thing is - it used to be. I've seen several 19th century facsimiles that looked like they hyphenated contractions as the rule - I think they basically thought of them as compound words, which used to be hyphenated much more often than is the current practice.

[identity profile] msmemory.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 11:01 am (UTC)(link)
Did the 19th c facsimiles hyphenate them across line breaks, which was the usage I'm deprecating in the 21st c manuscript?

[identity profile] herooftheage.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 02:06 pm (UTC)(link)
Not that I recall, though at the time I wasn't looking for that - I was looking specifically at how compound word phrases became one word. A 19th/early 20th century manuscript is likely to write "length-wise", for example.

[identity profile] kfitzwarin.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 01:15 pm (UTC)(link)
The times I've seen that was around a line break (which seems icky but not unreasonable) or a place where there had been a line break at some point. (There are a couple of books I've read recently where there had obviously been some sort of layout change, and so there are lots of hyphenations mid-line....)

[identity profile] gyzki.livejournal.com 2006-09-29 02:02 pm (UTC)(link)
I think they look ugly, but I've accepted them at times for line-breaking purposes. The alternative was to declare that a word the length of "shouldn't" could not be divided.