Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Grammar/More-Uses-of-the-Dash"
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*Dashes can also appear in pairs in a sentence. In order to indicate an explanatory part of a sentence or an afterthought, two dashes can be used like parentheses. An example: | *Dashes can also appear in pairs in a sentence. In order to indicate an explanatory part of a sentence or an afterthought, two dashes can be used like parentheses. An example: | ||
**Everybody – including children – couldn’t eat the cake because it was filled with sugar. | **Everybody – including children – couldn’t eat the cake because it was filled with sugar. | ||
==Related Lessons== | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Although-VS-Even-though|Although VS Even though]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Questions|Questions]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/More-on-Tautology|More on Tautology]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Quantifiers|Quantifiers]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Possible-Positions-of-Adverbs-of-Time-in-a-Sentence|Possible Positions of Adverbs of Time in a Sentence]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/The-Possessive-Case|The Possessive Case]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/GERUNDS|GERUNDS]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/In:-place|In: place]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Perfect-Tenses|Perfect Tenses]] | |||
* [[Language/English/Grammar/Actual-and-actually|Actual and actually]] |
Revision as of 16:34, 26 February 2023
Further Uses of the dash (–) in English
- Lesson 1: The Hyphen & the Dash
- Lesson 2: More Uses of the Dash
This is a continuation of the lesson on the hyphen and the dash. The uses of the dash will be treated in this lesson.
Interruption or other sentence
- Sometimes in written English, there is a necessity for a whole sentence to interrupt or enter into another sentence in order to pass across the complete message without ambiguity. An example:
- The rivers – I cannot remember all their names – have been dredged.
Break in a complete sentence
- The dash is used to show a break in a complete sentence.
- If he entered through the door, he must still be in there – so let’s keep our fingers crossed.
Emphasize the repeated word
- At times, a single placed between a repeated word is used to emphasize the repeated word. An example:
- The boy made new friends – friends that are more harm than good.
Set aside a summary or compile a list of items
- A single dash can be used to set aside a summary or compile a list of items. For example:
- Vanilla, flour, eggs, nutmeg – these are necessary in baking a cake.
- She bought three items – a cake tin, a spatula and an egg whisk.
2 dashes: explanatory part of a sentence or afterthought
- Dashes can also appear in pairs in a sentence. In order to indicate an explanatory part of a sentence or an afterthought, two dashes can be used like parentheses. An example:
- Everybody – including children – couldn’t eat the cake because it was filled with sugar.