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Grammar
Course: Grammar > Unit 7
Lesson 4: Hyphens, dashes, and ellipsesDashes
Dashes are like little actors—they can behave like colons, pairs of commas, or parentheses. Learn how to use them in this video!
Want to join the conversation?
- Would this be a correct sentence with a Dash? "It was the first time I went into a Haunted House— And the first time I got scared!"(25 votes)
- I would write it like: "It was the first time I went into a haunted house and the first time I got scared." It might be better to word it as: "The first time I went to a haunted house I got scared."
There are many ways to write this sentence, but usually dashes are special cases and aren't used often. Hope this helps!(13 votes)
- For the fourth use of a dash, can't you use an ellipsis instead?(10 votes)
- Good question! I don't fully know what you are asking, but I will answer the best I can
Ellipsis are used to show a pause or trailing off. dashes are used for abrupt cut-offs.
"um... I don't really know how..." it paused and trailed off
"whoa careful of the--" "oops." the first person was cut off.
I hope this answers your question and distinguishes the difference between a dash and an ellipsis.(18 votes)
- Commas sorta give a brief pause whereas, Dashes give off more of a theatrical pause. Essentially, Dashes are drama queens.(18 votes)
- Isn't it discourse marking in a dialogue one of the most important uses for dashes?(8 votes)
- Great question, Rafa!
It isn't a use of the dash in Standard American English; many other languages use dashes to indicate dialogue, but American English doesn't.(16 votes)
- What is a terminal punctuation?(6 votes)
- The terminal punctuation is the punctuation that ends a sentence. There are three: the period, the exclamation point, and the question mark.(10 votes)
- I thought that a dash would go down like this:_ Pls comment and say what this thing is.(3 votes)
- That is an underscore and it is used to underline words.(5 votes)
- I've only ever wanted snacks too.(6 votes)
- So a dash can be used to indicate when speech is being interrupted by something or someone. Can a dash be used as a pause as well?
So for example:
"Wow, this bed looks so—comfy." She said trying to be polite.
So the dash isn't at the end like the example in the video but it is indicating a pause in speech by the speaker themselves.
Can a dash be used like this?(4 votes)- Yeah that is good.(1 vote)
- So what about showing the span of something, such as "On a scale of 1 to 10"? Could one replace the word "to" with a dash? Or would that be called something different?(4 votes)
- You can learn anything.(3 votes)
Video transcript
- [Voiceover] Hey,
grammarians, hey, Paige. - [Voiceover] Hi, David. - [Voiceover] Today we're
gonna talk about dashes which is a piece of punctuation, looks kind of like this, shoop. It's just kind of a straight line. Later we're gonna talk about hyphens, which look like this, shoop. And there is a difference
between the two of them, it's kind of confusing, but first we're just
gonna talk about dashes, what they are, what they do. - [Voiceover] Okay, sounds good to me. - [Voiceover] So, dashes
have approximately four uses. Use number one is that
they can mark interruptions in the structure of a sentence, as in, "I ran to the bus stop--but the bus "had already driven away." So we're using this dash
to interrupt the structure of this sentence. - [Voiceover] Okay, but couldn't
you just put a comma there? - [Voiceover] You know,
you're totally could, you absolutely could use
a comma instead of a dash. But the dash has this feeling. And I'm gonna make up a word here, it feels more interrupty. - [Voiceover] Okay, right, so a comma sort of helps
the sentence keep flowing and the dash kind of
stops it for a second. - [Voiceover] And even
though, grammatically, those two sentences are identical, right, "I ran to the bus stop, comma, "but the bus had already driven away." Even though that's, technically, that means the exact same thing, "As I ran to the bus stop, dash, "but the bus had already driven away." This is kind of like an abrupt cutoff. So, like the comma,
right, the dash is uniting these two independent clauses. "I ran to the bus stop, the
bus had already driven away." Right, so, like, you know, comma, but we connect those
two independent clauses the same way the dash but is
connecting those two clauses. But it has a slightly
different connotation. It's just more abrupt in
the way that it connects these two things together. - [Voiceover] Okay. Also, it looks like you don't
have a space before or after your dash, is that right? - [Voiceover] Right. So, originally when I drawn
it, it did look a lot closer. But, yes, according to to
the Chicago Manual of Style that Khan Academy uses, it would just go word,
dash, word, then a space. But when you're using dashes, generally, you don't put spaces in between them, in between words. - [Voiceover] Right. - [Voiceover] So that's use number one, it can interrupt the
structure of a sentence. Use number two for the
dash is that they can act like parentheses in pairs. - [Voiceover] So the
dash is in the same place as another type of
punctuation could be again? - [Voiceover] Correct. - [Voiceover] Okay. - [Voiceover] The dash,
I guess, is kind of like, so let's look at another example sentence. And I'll switch colors. "The bug--which landed on
my nose--had to be the size "of a softball." Enormous bug. But, Paige, as you rightly
pointed out, you know, this is the same as
having it in parentheses. You wouldn't have both of
these together like that. - [Voiceover] But they do the same thing. - [Voiceover] Yeah, they
have the exact same function. - [Voiceover] In this case. - [Voiceover] In this case. So when you have them
in pairs like so, it's "The bug--which landed on
my nose--had to be the size "of a softball." So it's kind of this aside. If we really wanted to,
we could take it right out of the sentence, kind
of like an appositive, right, with commas. So we could say, "The bug had
to be the size of a softball." Sentence still makes sense. - [Voiceover] Right. - [Voiceover] Use number three. A dash can be used where you
would otherwise use a colon. - [Voiceover] So, in
this case, it's gonna be sort of introducing something, right? - [Voiceover] Mm-hmm. So the colon has this
linking power, right, it can introduce ideas,
it can start a list, you can do the same thing with a dash. So, for example, if you
wanted to introduce an idea, we could say. - [Voiceover] I have only
ever wanted one thing--snacks. - [Voiceover] Me, too, Paige. - [Voiceover] So many snacks. - [Voiceover] Me, too. So, right. So we're using this to introduce this idea the same way that we
would had it then a colon. - [Voiceover] Okay. So the dash is like a little actor. - [Voiceover] Yeah! - [Voiceover] Yeah, the
dash is like an actor that can use like do the jobs of all these other punctuation marks. - [Voiceover] Right. - [Voiceover] So it can be parentheses, it can be a colon, it can be like a comma sometimes. - [Voiceover] Wow! - [Voiceover] That is
a talented little guy. - [Voiceover] Seriously,
I'm very impressed. - [Voiceover] And the fourth
use of the dash is, again, to indicate interruptions,
but specifically to indicate interruptions in speech. - [Voiceover] This is like
its own little special thing. - [Voiceover] Yeah. - [Voiceover] It's not
acting like anything else? - [Voiceover] Nope. - [Voiceover] Just
indicating an interruption. Yes, it does. "Watch out for that--" - [Voiceover] Wham. So we're using this dash to say that this sentence was
interrupted by something, and then, you know, we
deploy the sound effect. But it could be anything, really. So if you're trying to write down dialogue that is being cutoff by something, by another person interrupting, by an avalanche of ice
cream, I don't know, whatever it is, then you would use a dash at the end of the sentence. So, no space. So we'd go, that, dash, quotation marks. And you wouldn't have to do any kind of terminal punctuation,
no need for a period or a question mark or
an exclamation point. The dash kind of serves that role, because it's a very fancy actor. So I wouldn't say that the
dash as an actor can perform the same roles as terminal punctuation, as periods or question
marks or exclamation points, but rather I would say that
it is cutting off the sentence before we can even get to
where those would live. - [Voiceover] Okay, yeah, it's saying there would've been more
words in this sentence and then terminal punctuation, but. - [Voiceover] So that's
what dashes can do. They are used to mark interruptions in the structure of a sentence, like, "I ran to the bus stop--but the bus "had already driven away." - [Voiceover] They can
act like parentheses when they're used in pairs, so like, "The bug--which landed on
my nose--had to be the size "of a softball." - [Voiceover] You can
use them like a colon to lead into lists or to link an idea. So, "I have only ever
wanted one thing--snacks." - [Voiceover] And they can
indicate interruptions in speech, like, "Watch out for that--" - [Voiceover] Wham. - [Voiceover] That was good. - [Voiceover] Thanks. And those are the functions of the dash. - [Voiceover] You got it. - [Voiceover] You can learn anything. David out. - [Voiceover] Paige out.