An em-dash is typically used as a stand-in for a comma or parenthesis to separate out phrases—or even just a word—in a sentence for various reasons (e.g. a parenthetical; an ersatz-ellipsis). Examples where an em-dash should be used:
- School is based on the three R’s—reading, writing, and ’rithmetic.
- Against all odds, Pete—the unluckiest man alive—won the lottery.
- I sense something; a presence I've not felt since—
School is based on the three R’s—reading, writing, and ’rithmetic.
Against all odds, Pete—the unluckiest man alive—won the lottery.
I sense something; a presence I've not felt since—
An en-dash is used to connect values in a range or that are related. A good rule is to use it when you're expressing a "to" relationship. Examples where an en-dash should be used:
- in years 1939–1945
- pages 31–32 may be relevant
- New York beat Los Angeles 98–95
- When American English would use an em-dash – following British and Canadian conventions.
The teacher assigned pages 101–181 for tonight’s reading material.
The 2015–2016 fiscal year was the most profitable year for the new business.
New York beat Los Angeles 98–95.
- pro-American
- cruelty-free eggs
- em-dash
- it's pronounced hos-pi-tal-it-tee
- Olivia Newton-John
The 40-hour workweek has become a thing of the past.
The skirt was a blue-green color.
It's pronounced hos-pi-tal-it-tee.
- 4 − 2 = 2.
4 − 2 = 2.
If you want to use the correct dash or hyphen in Stack Exchange comments, just use the appropriate HTML entity: —
for em-dash, –
for en-dash, and −
for the minus sign. The hyphen is, of course, directly on your keyboard.
Figurefigure dash
The figure dash (‒) is so named because it is the same width as a digit, at least in fonts with digits of equal width. This is true of most fonts, not only monospacedmono-spaced fonts.
The
The figure dash is used within numbers (e.g. phone number 555‒0199), especially in columns for maintaining alignment. Its meaning is the same as a hyphen, as represented by the hyphen-minus glyph; by contrast, the en dash is more appropriately used to indicate a range of values; the minus sign also has a separate glyph.
The figure dash is often unavailable; in this case, one may use a hyphen-minus instead. In Unicode, the figure dash is U+2012 (decimal 8210). HTML authors must use the numeric forms ‒
or ‒
to type it unless the file is in Unicode; there is no equivalent character entity.
If you want to use the correct dash or hyphen in Stack Exchange comments, just use the appropriate HTML entity: —
for em-dash, –
for en-dash, and −
for the minus sign. The hyphen is, of course, directly on your keyboard.