Contents:
Inserting a comment
Emphasizing explanatory material
Emphasizing material at the end of a sentence
Marking a sudden change in tone
Indicating hesitation in speech
Introducing a summary or explanation
In contrast to parentheses, dashes give more rather than less emphasis to the material they enclose. A typed dash is made with two hyphens (--) with no spaces before, between, or after. Many word-processing programs will automatically convert two typed hyphens into a solid dash (—).
Inserting a comment
Leeches — yuck — turn out to have valuable medical uses.
Emphasizing explanatory material
Indeed, several of modern India’s greatest scholars — such as the Mughal historian Muzaffar Alam of the University of Chicago — are madrasa graduates.
—WILLIAM DALRYMPLE
A single dash toward the end of a sentence may serve to emphasize the material at the end, to mark a shift in tone or a hesitation in speech, or to summarize or explain what has come before.
Emphasizing material at the end of a sentence
In the twentieth century it has become almost impossible to moralize about epidemics — except those which are transmitted sexually.
—SUSAN SONTAG, “AIDS and Its Metaphors”
Marking a sudden change in tone
New York is a catastrophe — but a magnificent catastrophe.
—LE CORBUSIER
Indicating hesitation in speech
As the officer approached his car, the driver stammered, “What — what have I done?”
Introducing a summary or explanation
In walking, the average adult person employs a motor mechanism that weighs about eighty pounds — sixty pounds of muscle and twenty pounds of bone.
—EDWIN WAY TEALE