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#111697 09/07/03 11:08 PM
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today I ran across the word "hyphen" used in a way I had never seen before. I was visiting the Woodstock, VT Historical Society Museum prior to a performance there, and the caption of a picture read something like this:
"the barn and main house were joined by a hyphen in 1943"...

what was meant was a long, low building joining the two previous structures. my OneLook search netted a whole lot of punctuation marks, but no buildings.
what say the board?



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#111698 09/07/03 11:42 PM
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A good visual metaphor!


#111699 09/08/03 12:10 AM
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well, that's what I guess was meant. I like it, too, but was wondering if there was more to it.



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#111700 09/08/03 12:41 AM
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the caption of a picture read something like this:

"the barn and main house were joined by a hyphen in 1943"...

Was it an aerial photo, by any chance?




#111701 09/08/03 12:53 AM
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aerial

no, just a picture of the house/hyphen/barn. it was a shed-roof sort of structure, with a few windows, that closed up the space between the two other buildings.
the word was used in such a way that it seemed to be a type of structure, rather than a description of it's shape/function.



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#111702 09/08/03 01:08 AM
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No luck on finding an old use of the word hyphen, but I did stumble across this:
Linguistics was first used to emphasize the difference between a newer approach to the study of language and the more traditional approach of philology. The philologist was concerned primarily with the historical development of languages as reflected in literary texts. The linguist tends to give priority to spoken languages, analyzing them as they operate at a given point in time.

http://www.m-w.com/info/w3/language.htm

Edit-- it was a shed-roof sort of structure, with a few windows, that closed up the space between the two other buildings. [lightbulb]
In other words, it wouldn't be all that functional by itself, but serves to connect two parts, thus making a whole.


#111703 09/08/03 09:00 PM
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serves to connect two parts

By a happy coincidence I came across a parallel example in a book just read, sent to me by a good friend:

She took the lower Severn River Bridge into the city. […] She crossed the bridge over College Creek – just a hyphen between two roads – turned up the road in front of the college…

from Seventeen Against the Dealer by Cynthia Voigt



#111704 09/09/03 02:02 AM
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maverick--this is about the 6th. different thing in the past week that has come up by at least two different people, in my circle of awareness. Three different people suddenly mentioned "To Kill a Mockingbird", for one of them. And now here you are, saying you've just found another ref. to a concrete, hands-on hyphen!


#111705 09/09/03 03:47 AM
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2. transf. a. A short pause between two syllables in speaking.

1868 GEO. ELIOT Sp. Gipsy I. 15 Whistles low notes or seems to thrum his lute As a mere hyphen 'twixt two syllables Of any steadier man. 1872 C. KING Mountain. Sierra Nev. x. 208 With hyphens of silence between each two syllables.

b. A small connecting link.

1868 G. DUFF Pol. Surv. 169 It was a bridge for migrations. It was a hyphen, connecting different races. 1881 Daily Tel. 21 June 6/8 M. de Lesseps, who is the sworn foe of all such geographical hyphens [isthmuses].


...and then there's the verb.



#111706 09/09/03 04:18 AM
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>aerial<

Prolly looked something like this:

............hy-phen


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