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Home Run or homerun

Discussion in 'Journalism topics only' started by huntsie, Jun 28, 2006.

  1. BillyT

    BillyT Active Member

    If you are using two words as an an adjective phrase, it's hyphenated unless the first word ends in -ly.

    I work for an anal-retentive editor.

    My editor is anal retentive.

    I wouldn't use walk-off homer because it's a cliche.

    By the way, if you are talking about the cartoon character, it's Homer, not homer.

    If you are talking about a sportswriter (or is it sports writer?), it's homer.
     
  2. joe

    joe Active Member

    Unless one of your reporters writes it ...
     
  3. SF_Express

    SF_Express Active Member

    I do "consecutive" anyway.

    Suggestion: I've become a lot calmer on one front as a copy editor by just finally realizing that hyphenation of compound modifiers (having nothing to do with "third straight") is an absolutely inexact science. You can't be given a hard and fast rule because there isn't one.

    Some have probably heard the "hot dog" rule, that it's absurd to hyphenate something like "hot dog bun" because nobody's going to think you have a "hot" "dog bun." And that's right.

    Nobody hyphenates "high school sports." Why? Just because.

    So if you do or don't hypenate a compound modifier that's clear in either sense, the world is not going to end either way.

    Err on the side of less hyphenation, not more.
     
  4. shotglass

    shotglass Guest

    I say the same thing about capitalization of titles.

    If there is any doubt, do not capitalize.
     
  5. Hank_Scorpio

    Hank_Scorpio Active Member

    Agreed.

    There's nothing wrong with straight. And it is two words.

    But consecutive just sounds better, I guess.
     
  6. donaugust

    donaugust Member

    I think part of the reason straight falls out of favor (in addition to its multiple meanings) is that it doesn't break. Really long one-syllable word.

    Recently discovered this during a stint on the desk.
     
  7. mediaguy

    mediaguy Well-Known Member

    Not as a statement to this thread or its merits, but ...

    Dumb ass or dumbass?
     
  8. insideman

    insideman Member

    dumb-ass
     
  9. Ace

    Ace Well-Known Member

    assclown or asshat are preferable.
     
  10. SF_Express

    SF_Express Active Member

    Actually, it has nothing to do with the breaking part.

    The old copy editor line is "as opposed to crooked?" So it's the multiple meanings.
     
  11. Mystery_Meat

    Mystery_Meat Guest

    dumbass, no hyphen. dumb doesn't modify ass (it would if you used, say, dumb-assed motherfucker). a dumbass is a noun specific from dumb ass -- dumbass being something, while dumb ass being an ass that happens to be dumb.
     
  12. donaugust

    donaugust Member

    A convenient excuse to get someone to use a word that breaks better.
     
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