Chicago says to hyphenate if before the verb but not to if after the verb. The examples given (section 5.93) are "a well-trained athlete" vs. "an athlete who is well trained." I thought I'd learned this rule doesn't apply with the verb "to be" but apparently that's not the case, given these examples
You should hyphenate well nourished and well developed IF followed by a noun - i.e., "well-nourished and well-developed man" or "well-nourished and well-developed patient". If the noun is before these, then you would not hyphenate - i.e., "The patient is well nourished and well developed". This would also be true for the following: "well-healed scar" or "the scar is well healed". Answer provided by a medical transcriptionist with 18 years experience.
You do not hyphenate the number.
If you use the term as an adjective, you would hyphenate it: He is a well-known man. But if you switch the word order around, you would say: He is a man who is well known.
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You mean at the end of a line? Well it depends on how much room you have hyphenate at a syllable is probably best. If you have little space before the end of the line don't hyphenate a word. You could hyphenate like this trans- portation.
You should hyphenate well nourished and well developed IF followed by a noun - i.e., "well-nourished and well-developed man" or "well-nourished and well-developed patient". If the noun is before these, then you would not hyphenate - i.e., "The patient is well nourished and well developed". This would also be true for the following: "well-healed scar" or "the scar is well healed". Answer provided by a medical transcriptionist with 18 years experience.
You do not need to hyphenate.
You do not hyphenate the number.
You would hyphenate "thank you" when it is used as an adjective before a noun, such as in "a thank-you card."
Don't hyphenate; ongoing is one word.
You hyphenate it only at the hyphen.
I think it's more accepted to hyphenate it.
Can you, or should you? You can hyphenate it if you're moving between lines in a paragraph and need to break up the word. You shouldn't hyphenate it normally.
You can hyphenate the word improvement like this: im-prove-ment.
No...
If you use the term as an adjective, you would hyphenate it: He is a well-known man. But if you switch the word order around, you would say: He is a man who is well known.