The em-dash How-to
Dear Legal Writer: Spice up your prose with the EM-DASH.
Here’s a full how-to:
🔷 WHAT is it?
An em-dash—which looks like these here—is a punctuation mark that shows a break in a sentence.
All agree that you can use an em-dash,
– in place of a comma,
– in place a colon, or
– as a pair (to replace two commas or parentheses).
The em-dash gets its name from the width it shares with the capital M.
Some people spell em-dash without a hyphen: “em dash.”
(I don’t consider one spelling as more correct than the other.)
🔷 WHY use it?
An em-dash:
– adds emphasis,
– draws attention to its content, and
– adds pizzazz to otherwise lifeless prose.
An em-dash can also improve readability, especially in an otherwise comma-clogged sentence.
🔷 THREE WAYS to use it:
1️⃣
Use an em-dash to set off words at the start or end of a sentence to emphasize them:
EX:
“Palsgraff—who could ever forget that case?”
“Who could ever forget the most famous tort case—Palsgraff?”
2️⃣
Use an em-dash in the middle or end of a sentence to define, conclude, emphasize, or explain the content that precedes it.
EX:
“The court awarded summary judgment—obviating the need for a trial.”
“Teacher! I brought you an apple—a big, red one—so would you approve my request for a test accommodation?”
3️⃣
Use a pair of em-dashes to set off mid-sentence content that is parenthetical when you want to:
– amplify the content, more than a pair of commas would, but
– not overshadow the content (the way a pair of parentheses would).
EX:
“The court relied on an outdated grammar book—the 1996 edition of “Woe is I,” by Patricia O’Connor—when interpreting the statutory text.”
I will publicize your win at the moot court competition—your grand, first-place prize—yet I’ll be neutral about the tie, as you shared the prize with another contestant, and I’ll downplay your co-winner’s young age (him being an eight-year-old and all).
{There are also some other, uncommon & more technical em-dash uses. See Garner, Guberman, and Google for further reading.}
🔷 TWO CAVEATS:
1/ Don’t use more than 1 em-dash, or 1 pair of em-dashes per sentence; more than that is too much for the reader to keep track of.
2/ Don’t go crazy with em-dashes.
Use them like a spice: a dash here and there is delicious, but don’t drench.
As with any device that adds emphasis, overuse defeats the purpose.
*****
🗳️ Might you start using the em-dash? Try it out in a comment, if you’d like.
Fondly,
💌 Amanda
#DearLegalWriter
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