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I am still seeing uses of on-line, though I think it is incorrect. For example:

A web browser enables a user to go on-line/online.

Can you tell me which is the more appropriate to use, on-line or online?

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5 Answers 5

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According to this Google Ngram, online is used more often.

The use has shifted over time to omit the hyphen. For example in 1950, the OED writes:

1950 W. W. Stifler High-speed Computing Devices (Engin. Res. Associates) ii. 7 In on-line operation the input is communicated directly‥to the data-reduction device.

This was still the case in the 1970s:

1971 Computers & Humanities 5 192 The shoebox is an automatic text-processing and retrieval system implemented for on-line operation on an ibm 360/50 computer.

However, now the hyphen has dropped out, so the usage is as follows:

1998 T. Sheldon Encycl. Networking (new ed.) 990 In online transaction processing, transactions are executed immediately, as opposed to batch processing.

So, the current usage favors online instead of on-line.

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  • 2
    NGrams does not handle hyphens well, and frequently their inclusion will cause unpredictable results.
    – Kit Z. Fox
    Commented Sep 16, 2011 at 12:28
  • 1
    It is just a rough sketch, but it doesn't stand alone. Along with the other info simchona provides (as well as my personal observations), the graph seems credible enough.
    – Daniel
    Commented Sep 16, 2011 at 13:47
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    @kit-- dr65 told me how to get ngrams to recognize at least some hyphens by putting a space on either side
    – user10893
    Commented Sep 16, 2011 at 14:04
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Both are acceptable; usage depends upon the audience you're writing for, and then your personal writing style/personal taste, in that order.

There are many words in English which can be hyphenated according to personal preference, and often hyphenation provides greater clarity over non-hyphenation. Generally, in formal, professional writing, the decision to hyphenate or not will be made by the editorial staff for which one is writing. At the academic level, however, this decision will be made either by the professor, or -- if not -- devolve to the author him/herself.

However, as simchona's N-Gram indicates, "online" is currently gaining preference over "on-line". For my part, I tend to use one or the other, depending on context and rhetorical aim. For instance, I tend to hyphenate when the word is used as a predicate complement ("I am on-line", "I need to get on-line"), and use the non-hyphenated version when it's just a straight adjective ("It's an online game", "Online accounts are down, right now"). But these aren't hard and fast, even for me; if I'm writing for younger audiences, I will tend to just go with "online", because that seems to be how things are trending with their age group.

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I would do just the opposite of what you do. In other words, if I'm using it as an adjective, I would do what one has always done when two words form one adjective--use a hyphen. Hence: "It's an on-line project." I am also out of step with the rest of the world in that I see two words, period, when the expression is used as what you call a predicate complement: "I am on line" is how my brain would write it.

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I have been a newspaper editor for 47 years in Houston. Try thinking of it this way. "On-line" and "online" are just short for "on the line," the line being your connection to the World Wide Web. So we really have three choices. As we say in advertising, "Pick the one that's best for you."

Now, after I initially posted this, I had this thought: Consider "on the phone" (or in today's world, "on the cell"). We have not evolved to "on-phone" or "onphone." So, I'm beginning to think that maybe we go back to the future and use "on the line."

Now I feel so much more refreshed.

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It seems to me that there is a very slight difference between the original version ("on-line operation") and the modern use ("to go online"). In 1950, being "on-line" meant that a device was working over a line of communication ("on the line" as someone else pointed out). Now "being online" describes a full user experience, and not just the method by which their computer is connected. This change in meaning occurred in the 1990s when people started spending more time "online."

It's possible that as the term became more common, lazy typists began to opt out of the hyphen.

Computer and internet grammar has evolved rapidly since the late 1980s. You rarely see people saying they're going to be "on the World Wide Web" anymore, nor do you see "Internet" capitalized much, as was common 20 years ago.

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  • Inquiring minds want to know: what are computer grammar and internet grammar? Is that when you put the verbs before the subjects in declarative sentences? Is it using the past participle where before we used the present tense? Have we transformed our erstwhile prepositions into postpositions? Is be now a regular verb? Are absolute constructions now all the rage? Has English become more of a head-final language? Have we reverted to thou/thee/thy/thine pronouns and corresponding verb inflections? Do our nouns now inflect for the dual number? Do we have newly defective modal verbs?
    – tchrist
    Commented Jul 9, 2016 at 20:43

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