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  1. Yes, you may insert a hyphen into an unhyphenated phrase to which you have prefixed 'non-' (or, again, 'non–') in order to clarify your meaning; but this should be done only if the hyphenated phrase accurately reflects the meaning which is being negated.

  2. 4 Μαΐ 2024 · Use the right word if the unhyphenated word means something different from the hyphenated one. This is pretty rare for "non-", but I did find one: "nonage" means the period before reaching legal age, whereas "non-age" means not related to age, as in "non-age-related degeneration".

  3. Yes, a two-word modifier (like this one) requires a hyphen, except that the commonly held convention is that adverbs ending in "ly" don't (like that one). See this table in the Chicago Manual of Style.

  4. 20 Μαΐ 2018 · "Non-" is defined as "a prefix meaning 'not,' freely used as an English formative, usually with a simple negative force as implying mere negation or absence of something (rather than the opposite or reverse of it, as often expressed by un-).

  5. Prefixes are letters which we add to the beginning of a word to make a new word with a different meaning. Prefixes can, for example, create a new word opposite in meaning to the word the prefix is attached to.

  6. Prefix. Guidance. Example. anti-Use a hyphen with: letters; names; words beginning with 'i'; two-word compounds (or more) used as adjectives. anti-HBs, anti-Bitis-Echis-Naja serum, anti-icteric, anti-gas gangrene serum. co-A hyphen can be used as an aid to reading if the following word starts with a vowel. Do not insert a hyphen into well ...

  7. The English prefix non-, which means “not,” appears in hundreds of English vocabulary words, such as non sense, non fat, and non returnable. You can remember that the prefix non- means “not” via the word non poisonous, for a substance that is non poisonous is “not” poisonous.

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