In most texts for school or work, your word processing program typically is not set to hyphenate words at the ends of lines. But sometimes you will want to produce a special sort of text that demands hyphenation—a newletter, a brochure, or a table with narrow columns. Without hyphenation, the columns of text would not look right. When you must hyphenate, follow these rules.
Divide words between syllables; never divide a one-syllable word.
Never divide a word so that a single letter stands alone at the end of a line or fewer than three letters begin a line.
When dividing a compound word at the end of a line, either make the break between the words that form the compound or put the whole word on the next line.
Exercises:
The hyphen 1
The hyphen 2