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In most of its uses the em dash ("long dash") is a substitute for the colon, semicolon or comma, but it indicates a more emphatic or abrupt break in the sentence, or a less formal style.
Use a dash, not a colon, to enclose a list of terms that does not end the sentence:
not
Like parentheses, a dash may be used at the end of an unfinished or interrupted statement or a pause, as in transcripts:
Some Hon. Members: Oh, oh!
Here the dashes are used to indicate, first, a pause and clarification and, second, an interruption.
The dash may be used to introduce an afterthought, correction or repetition:
It may similarly be used to set off an emphatic ending or one that contrasts with the remainder of the sentence:
Dashes give greater emphasis to parenthetic material than do commas or parentheses. If the parenthetic material contains internal punctuation or forms a complete sentence, the commas that might have been used to enclose it should be replaced by dashes or parentheses, depending on the degree of emphasis desired or the closeness of the relationship to the rest of the sentence. Parentheses are generally used to enclose material more remote from the main thrust of the sentence, dashes for material more closely related:
—Margaret Atwood
The em dash is also used to attribute a quotation, as in the example above.
A dash is sometimes inserted before the final portion of a sentence to clarify its relationship to the rest of the sentence, often with the help of a summarizing pronoun such as all or these or with the repetition of key words:
Explanatory material in apposition may be set off by dashes to secure greater emphasis than would be achieved with a colon or commas or to avoid confusion with commas within the apposition:
A dash may be used to separate the heading of a chapter or the like from the description of its contents or to separate subheadings within a chapter or section, as in a catalogue:
It is sometimes used in place of bullets, numerals or letters in vertical lists:
3. Service to the public
-enquiries answered
-brochures sent out
-complaints investigated
It can represent nil or unknown in a list of figures:
Element | Atomic weight | Density | Melting point |
---|---|---|---|
Actinium | 227 | — | — |
Aluminum | 26.98 | 2.7 | 660 |
Do not combine the dash with any mark of punctuation other than quotation marks, the question mark, the exclamation mark and occasionally the period. In particular, do not use the colon-dash (:—) to introduce a quotation or a list.
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