0 a short stroke (-) which is used to join two parts of a word or phrase, as in co-exist; a sleeping-bag; a well-thought-out plan. -- dấu nối
Hyphenation can be seen as a classification task, which decides, for instance, for each character whether it is preceded by a hyphen or not.
Note that according to the maximal onset rule, the hyphen would have been placed in front of the s to begin with.
It accepts the use of hyphens in duties amalgamated words where they cannot be easily run together.
There are many typos, probable misspellings, hyphens in words where none belong, repeated lines of text, and missing words.
Case-marking labels for the first and the second noun are separated by a hyphen.
What is instructive is that two of the advertisements in a set chosen at random contain no hyphens at all.
This hyphen has been added for the sake of clarity.
A dot indicates identity with base on top line, and a hyphen, gaps.