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Follow these guidelines when deciding whether to use a hyphen after a prefix.
Hyphenate nouns or adjectives beginning with the prefixes ex (meaning "former"), self, all and quasi:
However, when self is the base word to which a suffix is added, do not hyphenate:
Write SI/metric unit compounds as one word:
Most words beginning with the following prefixes are written as one word: after, ante, anti, bi, co, counter, de, down, extra, infra, inter, intra, iso, macro, micro, multi, over, photo, poly, post, pre, pro, pseudo, re, retro, semi, stereo, sub, super, trans, tri, ultra, un, under and up.
However, there are many exceptions. Check the Canadian Oxford Dictionary when in doubt, and see below for three specific types of exceptions.
Use a hyphen when the word following the prefix begins with the same vowel as the one with which the prefix ends or when the compound’s appearance would be confusing without the hyphen:
In certain cases, use the hyphen to preserve a difference in meaning between the hyphenated and the solid compound:
Hyphenate a prefix joined to a proper noun or adjective:
Exceptions: transatlantic, transpacific
Hyphenate chemical terms preceded by an italicized prefix:
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