The OED is giving in to the Americans and the internet, abandoning the hyphen. Some 16,000 words in the new edition of the shorter OED have lost their hyphens.
Examples of words that now look wrong:
Formerly hyphenated words split in two:
fig leaf, hobby horse, ice cream, pin money, pot belly, test tube, water bed
Formerly hyphenated words unified in one:
bumblebee, chickpea, crybaby, leapfrog, logjam, lowlife, pigeonhole, touchline, waterborne
Kevin Drum asks:
"Ice cream" used to be hyphenated? Really? Was this a British thing? Even the New Yorker isn't pretentious enough to hyphenate "ice-cream," is it?
Well, maybe it is a British thing. But what's pretentious about a hyphen?
maybe not pretentious, but it feels old-fashioned in American English. see the classic editorials in The Onion featuring T. Herman Zweibel.
if you suppose that over time we tend to drop hyphens as the compound word becomes more familiar, than using a hyphen in general could seem like a throwback.
Posted by: Mike | September 25, 2007 at 12:40 AM