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Rafaela
Does 'ish' at the end of a word need a hypen when it means a little bit / quite ? (slang)
he was making a scary-ish face /scaryish face (a face quite scary but not totally)
she was happy-ish / happyish (a little bit happy)
I will be there nine-ish /nineish (I'll be there at about 9 o'clock)
19 sep. 2016 14:22
Antwoorden · 5
I would say it is a matter of preference. By definition, there is no correct answer, because we're looking at slang, not "proper" English.
Personally, I use -ish rather than ish, but everyone will have their own opinion.
19 september 2016
The rule is very simple: check a dictionary. If it is a recognized standard word, it will be in the dictionary and you spell it without a hyphen. Some examples: reddish, yellowish, greenish, bluish, darkish, nightmarish, kittenish, brackish, coltish, slowish, wolfish, sheepish, Moorish, Turkish, impish.
If you are manufacturing it yourself by adding the suffolk "-ish" to a word, and it's not in the dictionary, then use a hyphen.
If it's a word we all need, then maybe you will be lucky and people will start to use it and someday it will be added to the dictionary.
19 september 2016
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Rafaela
Taalvaardigheden
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels, Portugees
Taal die wordt geleerd
Chinees (Mandarijn), Engels
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