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Marcelo R. Martins
When Do I have to use "-" between words?
Hi fellows.
Please, I saw in several phrases words like these: 2,000-dollars, forty-years, twenty-two-years-old.
When Do I have to separate the words with "-" ?
Thanks a lot. Hugs, Marcelo
27 de feb. de 2017 2:11
Respuestas · 10
You use hyphens when the words are used before a noun to describe the noun. So yes, hyphens here:
* My three-year-old niece likes cats.
* The twenty-thousand-dollar prize belonged to his sister.
* I have a two-year-old cat and an eleven-year-old cat.
But not here:
* My niece is three years old and she likes cats.
* The prize, which was twenty thousand dollars, belonged to his sister.
* I have two cats. One cat is two years old and the other is eleven years old.
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Also notice: * three-YEAR-old niece
* My niece is three YEARS old
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English also uses hyphens in certain numbers (20+, 30+, etc.) regardless of where the number occurs in the sentence. So... twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-three, etc...
* My twenty-two-year-old sister is getting married next week.
* My sister, who is twenty-two years old, is getting married next week.
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Hope that helps!
27 de febrero de 2017
They need to appear this way in order to use the hyphen (-). They need a noun after them.
a 2,000-dollar prize
some forty year-old fellows
a twenty two year-old guy
Have a great day!
27 de febrero de 2017
Thanks Jerry.
27 de febrero de 2017
'Fellows' is not really what you want to say. It's dated and a little odd these days.
"Friends' or 'everyone" sounds good.
27 de febrero de 2017
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¡Escribe tus preguntas y deja que los hablantes nativos te ayuden!
Marcelo R. Martins
Competencias lingüísticas
Inglés, Portugués
Idioma de aprendizaje
Inglés
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