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Pedants' corner

Headstone inscription. Calling all pedants.

15 replies

clam · 09/05/2008 13:25

DH and SIL want to write "much loved" on it. Should there be a hyphen or not? They reckon none of the other headstones up at the cemetery have hyphens but, having seen some of them, I don't reckon that's a reliable guide.

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pofaced · 09/05/2008 13:31

no hyphen

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cornflakegirl · 09/05/2008 13:35

I think the guardian style guide says with hyphen:

www.guardian.co.uk/styleguide/page/0,,184838,00.html

But given the complete lack of ambiguity as to the meaning either way, I'd say it's a matter of taste.

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clam · 09/05/2008 13:54

So, which is more tasteful?!

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Bink · 09/05/2008 14:02

Context ...?

"much-loved" has to be followed by a noun, otherwise it will look weird: "much-loved wife of ..."

"much loved" needn't be: "XXXX - much loved, much missed"

If I had to choose, I'd go for no hyphen, but more for aesthetic reasons (it would look less "fussy") than anything else.

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MrsBadger · 09/05/2008 14:03

Bink is right

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clam · 09/05/2008 14:16

Context: "Much loved mother etc.."

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Libra · 09/05/2008 14:19

Need to hyphenate much-loved mother, but not my mother was much loved.

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ninedragons · 09/05/2008 14:51

Libra is correct.

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pofaced · 09/05/2008 20:40

My initial "no hyphen" was because much is adverb of loved but if it's "much-loved mother" it's hyphenated as adjective of mother.... but then what about dearly departed as opposed to dearly-departed? unless she was spendthrift...

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ninedragons · 10/05/2008 09:48

No hyphen if the first word ends with a y. According to the style guide for the bank at which I work, anyway.

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edam · 10/05/2008 09:52

Never heard that one before, ninedragons, and I write and edit for a living! Do they give any explanation?

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ninedragons · 10/05/2008 10:12

No, but they're very big on "that's the way it's always been done". It probably stems from what some Swiss guy's English governess said in 1834.

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ninedragons · 10/05/2008 10:24

Now I think about it, it's probably so the savant derivatives traders don't get confused about adverbs. They have done nothing but maths since they were 14 and it's just easier to give them a rule about words that end in y than short-circuit their brains by explaining the concept of adverbs.

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edam · 10/05/2008 11:31
Grin
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Lottiecat1 · 12/02/2021 07:25

I'd say no hyphen for the reason that when choosing an inscription for a headstone you'd want to keep it as simple as possible, if you look at headstones there is little punctuation- I'd only use punctuation if totally necessary to make the inscription make sense, so in this instance no hyphen needed.

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