View example sentences, synonyms and word forms for Hyphenated.

Hyphenated

Hyphenated meaning

simple past and past participle of hyphenate

Synonyms of Hyphenated

Example sentences (20)

And that makes it a lot easier for an affinity, or residency, to become a national identity, even if often a hyphenated one.

But the older study was also conducted at a time when hyphenated names may have seemed more normal.

I said, think of a hyphenated word that describes certain pants.

Two things jumped out at me: AP finally agrees that “hyphenated Americans” are a relic.

Even SLU students that have lived their whole lives in the United States often come from rich traditions beyond our shores; hyphenated identities.

Whether you call it Derry, Londonderry or some humorous/hyphenated variant of the two, we need to talk about how Northern Ireland’s second city finds itself permanently at the bottom of the prosperity pile – not just in NI but across the UK as a whole.

Berthoff (1962), 164 After his use of hyphenated compounds in Pierre, Melville's writing gives Berthoff the impression of becoming less exploratory and less provocative in his choices of words and phrases.

For the many rather recent immigrants from other countries, the identification also includes all the national origins: people tend to call themselves Moroccans or Turks rather than an American-style hyphenated version.

For this purpose, the concept of a soft hyphen (discretionary hyphen, optional hyphen) was introduced, allowing such manual specification of a place where a hyphenated break is allowed but not forced.

He insisted that one had to be 100% American, not a " hyphenated American " who juggled multiple loyalties.

Hyphenated separation techniques refers to a combination of two (or more) techniques to detect and separate chemicals from solutions.

In 1912, the Parliament of Canada made the official name of these territories the Northwest Territories, dropping all hyphenated forms of it.

In Australia and New Zealand, the term is always hyphenated.

In later publications Heidegger writes the term in hyphenated form as Da-sein, thus emphasizing the distance from the word's ordinary usage.

In the latter case the partner whose name wasn't chosen can keep his birth name hyphenated to the new name (e.g. Schmidt and Meyer choose to marry under the name Meyer.

ROT13 ("rotate by 13 places", sometimes hyphenated ROT-13) is a simple letter substitution cipher that replaces a letter with the letter 13 letters after it in the alphabet.

Such a rule successfully codifies almost all choices and thus leaves little to discretion except a few rare or neologistic words, which are safely hyphenated.

The genus name has also been hyphenated as Pseudo-tsuga.

The increasing prevalence of computer technology and the advent of the Internet have given rise to a subset of common nouns that might have been hyphenated in the past (e.g. " toolbar ", " hyperlink ", " pastebin ").

They usually consist of two words, and are often hyphenated.