Do You Know The Difference Between A Hyphen And A Dash? Here's Your Go-To Guide  (2024)

Do you know the difference between a hyphen and a dash?

Or between an en dash and an em dash?

(Who even came up with the en dash as a separate thing?)

Even if you’re pretty sure of the difference between all three, sometimes it helps to read a clear overview of what sets these marks apart — and which one goes where.

By the time you read this post, you’ll be a hyphen vs. dash expert.

Prepare yourself.

What’s in this post:

  • What Is a Hyphen?
    • What Does a Hyphen Look Like?
  • What Is a Dash?
    • What Does a Dash Look Like?
  • The Difference Between a Hyphen and a Dash
    • Specific Uses for the En Dash
    • En Dash vs Hyphen
    • Hyphen or En dash vs. Em Dash
  • Hyphen Examples
  • Dashes Examples

What Is a Hyphen?

A hyphen separates two parts of a compound word. That word could be a noun or a modifier. The hyphen is what joins two nouns or a noun and a gerund into a single word like beach-house or dog-friendly.

You’ll find the hyphen on any standard U.S. keyboard after the zero (0) key.

What Does a Hyphen Look Like?

What does a hyphen look like? It’s not as silly a question as it might sound because what looks like a hyphen could also be an en dash.

Because someone decided it made sense to distinguish the two. Or maybe someone mistook a hyphen for a dash — or (gasp) used a hyphen in place of an em dash. We won’t dwell on that.

A dash vs. hyphen error probably won’t land you in jail. But why risk it?

Simply put, a hyphen is a very short straight line of punctuation. It’s easier to show this mark’s potential with real words:

  • One-fourth
  • Forty-two
  • mother-in-law
  • Self-control, self-care, self-discipline…
  • Word endings or beginnings: -ly, post-, pre-…

That last example shows another use for the hyphen: to indicate a word ending (with the hyphen preceding it) or beginning (with the hyphen right after it).

You’ll often see this in constructions like these:

  • “Pre- and post-war poetry”
  • “Is he bi- or multi-lingual?”

Not all compound words use hyphens.

Hyphens appear in compound modifiers that come before a noun — but not those that come afterward:

  • Half-open door
  • Too-empty room
  • Fairy-tale ending

But…

  • This hotel is not dog friendly
  • This room is definitely not too empty.
  • The door is half-open.

Also, leave out the hyphen when the compound modifier starts with an adverb ending in -ly:

  • Brightly lit room
  • Warmly dressed children
  • “That’s beautifully done!”

Besides the above rules, over time, many hyphenated words lose their hyphens and become closed compounds:

  • E-mail → email
  • E-book → ebook

Rule #1 with hyphens is you never leave a space before or after it. Hyphens might as well be a letter in the middle of the word.

What Is a Dash?

Dashes separate words or groups of words (like parenthetical expressions).

That brings us to the two different dash types: em dashes and en dashes, which, though similar, belong to different worlds (i.e., contexts).

Speaking as an em dash lover, I think the biggest trick with em dashes is not to overuse them. On the other hand, the en dash often gives the floor to its “body double,” the simple hyphen—which is right there on the keyboard.

Not everyone can be as cool (and worth the extra keystrokes) as an em dash.

What Does a Dash Look Like?

If you see a short, straight line breaking up words in a sentence, you’re looking at a dash, not a hyphen.

That said, let’s look at the two dashes and what makes them different.

First, one is longer:

  • The em dash (—) → which is like two hyphens joined together
  • The en dash (–) → which is like a slightly longer hyphen

If it helps, picture the em dash superimposed on the letter “M” and the en dash superimposed on the “N.” One of these is clearly shorter than the other. And the reason for that lies in each one’s purpose:

  • The em dash creates a pause between words or phrases.
  • The en dash indicates a range between two numbers (though it can also do more, as you’ll soon see).

Think of the em dash’s longer length as that extra beat before the next syllable. It’s that extra bit of pause you don’t get with a comma.

Hence my addiction.

You can use an em dash either as a more emphatic comma or as a replacement for a semicolon or colon.

  • Replacing a colon: “I’ve chosen the colors for my new website — aqua, dark turquoise, and cream.”
  • Replacing a semicolon: “He knows you never wanted to come — he overheard your phone conversation the other day.”
  • Replacing a comma: “Her ring — the one with the square-cut emerald — sold for $500.”

Em dashes also are handy with dialogue that’s broken up. They show an interruption or a change in direction, with narrative in between, as we’ll show later with some examples.

To insert a dash, you’ll need your alt key and number pad:

  • Em dash (—) → Alt + 0151
  • En dash ( – ) → Alt + 0150

Contrary to the directions found in multiple dash-related posts online, you cannot create an en dash by simply holding down the Ctrl button and hitting the minus/hyphen (-) key.

This may have worked in the past. Try it today, and you’ll see the fonts on the page in front of you shrink (i.e., zoom out). Ctrl with the plus (+) key enlarges or zooms in.

If your keyboard doesn’t have a number pad on the right-hand side, you can also use the character map for Windows — under “Windows Accessories.”

The Difference Between a Hyphen and a Dash

It’s tough to decide whether to go with a hyphen or dash when you don’t have a solid grasp of their differences.

And size isn’t the only difference. To really understand these punctuation marks, you need to know the uses for each.

Specific Uses for the En Dash

As you saw above, en dashes aren’t just for showing numerical ranges, though that is one of their main things. We’ll offer some examples further down, but, for now, let’s get clear on all the uses for the en dash:

  • Numerical ranges → for dates, page numbers, times, etc.
  • Directional references → bus/metro/train lines, highways
  • Oppositional references → political debates, design contrasts
  • Unhyphenated compounds → like Post–Civil War era

That last one allows you to avoid awkward hyphenated expressions (like post-Civil-War).

En Dash vs Hyphen

Just for a laugh, let’s try putting a hyphen where an en dash belongs:

  • 2001-2022 (hyphen)
  • 2001–2022 (en dash)

To the untrained eye, they sure seem interchangeable. And, to be fair, Grammarly, ProWritingAid, and even human editors probably won’t make a fuss, either.

In fact, other than in formal, printed publications, hyphens often take the place of en dashes, especially when indicating numerical ranges.

Because, as pointed out earlier, the hyphen key is right there on the keyboard. And, like hyphens, en dashes do not have spaces before or afterward.

Em dashes, on the other hand, can go either way: a space before and after or no spaces.

More Related Articles

11 Examples Of Misplaced Modifiers

So Where Does The Comma Go? Before Or After So?

Should You Capitalize After A Colon? Here Are The Rules You Need To Know

Hyphen or En dash vs. Em Dash

Now, let’s briefly touch on the use of single hyphens or en dashes where an em dash belongs.

If time is of the essence, and you don’t know which code to type in with the Alt key (because, for some reason, no one taught you this as soon as your tiny hands could navigate a keyboard—or you just forgot), please at least use a double-hyphen to stand in as an em dash.

It’s aesthetically painful but less so than a single, lonely hyphen trying (and failing—miserably) to do an em dash’s job.

It had to be said.

Hyphen Examples

Examples are pretty useful for reinforcing grammar rules, so we’ll include some here.

First, let’s look at some textbook hyphen examples:

  • Compound nouns — Mother-in-law, son-in-law, check-out
  • Compound modifiers — like kid-friendly and well-lit (before a noun)
  • Forty-nine (and other written-out numbers from 21 to 99)
  • Two-thirds, one-half, etc. (before a noun — like “cup”)
  • Prefixes: ex-husband, post-mortem, pre-owned…

Granted, quite a few compound words joining prefixes (pre-, post-, bi-… ) to whole words have ditched the hyphen and become closed compounds, at least in some cases.

You’ll still see some of them hyphenated some of the time. But your editing app of choice (Grammarly, ProWritingAid) might prefer one over the other:

  • Postpartum vs. post-partum (ProWritingAid is like, “What is partum?”)
  • Preapproved vs. pre-approved (In this case, PWA likes the hyphen.)

Dashes Examples

Now, let’s have some dash examples to show them off a bit:

En dash:

  • Year ranges: 2008–2012, the 2022–23 school year
  • Time ranges: 1:00–1:30, 8:00–10:00, 7–9
  • Other numerical ranges: pages 32–40, aisles 4–7
  • Showing conflict (in place of “vs.”): capitalist–socialist debates, minimalism–maximalism design
  • Unhyphenated compounds: Mick Jagger–style moves, pre–World War II (instead of Mick-Jagger-style and pre-World-War-II, with hyphens)

Em dash:

  • “She’s found the perfect apartment—and reliable internet is included.”
  • “He found the ideal dog breed for his first pet—a miniature poodle.”
  • “She left her coat—the one with the faux fur collar—at the restaurant.”
  • “‘Hold up! I was going to say—’ But I couldn’t hear the rest over the sound of the door slamming between us.”
  • “‘You ungrateful—’ I froze her with a look and asked, ‘Ungrateful to whom?’”
  • “‘I was about to—’ he started saying as I glanced at the clock. His expression changed. ‘—Am I making you late for something?’”

Now that you’re a dash vs. hyphen expert, you can use them in your work with confidence and style. And when someone asks, “Does a dash go here?” you can ask, “Do you mean an em dash or… an en dash?”

May you use this power wisely — and have fun with it.

Do You Know The Difference Between A Hyphen And A Dash? Here's Your Go-To Guide  (2024)
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