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"hyphenated" Definitions
  1. of, relating to, or designating a person, group, or organization of mixed origin or identity: an Irish-American club and other hyphenated organizations.
"hyphenated" Antonyms

111 Sentences With "hyphenated"

How to use hyphenated in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "hyphenated" and check conjugation/comparative form for "hyphenated". Mastering all the usages of "hyphenated" from sentence examples published by news publications.

I learned of a hyphenated friend who married a hyphenated husband.
Every American has a hyphenated identity, not just nonwhite people.
I live here because it encourages and welcomes hyphenated identities.
Good luck using voice control in cities plagued by hyphenated addresses.
I'm a creative person with a multi-hyphenated slew of titles.
That's a lot of hyphenated descriptors, but they are all necessary.
The Hyphenated Lives series speaks to the way social values are constructed.
To us, there is no hyphenated identity, roots are an individual reality.
But which ones should be written separately, which hyphenated and which closed up?
Many of the people Mr. Mateen killed had similar stories of hyphenated existence.
It has opted for multiculturalism, which can abide hyphenated identities and communal behavior.
The hyphenated form is also in there, so either one is A-OK.
I don't know if I really wanted a hyphenated name on a jersey.
When they finish high school a majority of them identified themselves as hyphenated Americans.
Many explore the hyphenated identities of the artist, and displacement, both literal and figurative.
To the white Briton, the hyphenated identity — Bangladeshi-British, Pakistani-British — only highlights otherness.
Most importantly, they've identified as Americans first — they've often dropped the "hyphenated" identities entirely.
It is not only the big guns who can boast of a hyphenated heritage.
They come from 16 different countries, but it seems almost everyone has a hyphenated heritage.
Yes, the kid's last name is hyphenated, and yes ... Chloe's name gets the last word.
This was in contrast to Portland, where hyphenated sexual and gender identities took center stage.
Many take great care in, for example, their Instagram biographies to list their hyphenated backgrounds.
Though I am not Somali, I also experienced confusion over my hyphenated identity, like Zacharia.
The multi-hyphenated star even let us in on her favorite makeup products for brown women.
A government database might omit the hyphen from someone with a hyphenated last name, for example.
During periods of ethnic strife in the 20th century hyphenated-Indian communities turned inwards for self-protection.
Although known as a proponent of the "melting pot," Roosevelt's attack on "hyphenated Americans" fueled nativist sentiments.
Regardless, I'm proud of finding the solid set of seven sneakily-hyphenated words that made the cut.
The whole hyphenated future as opposed to believing we are all Americans regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation.
The bold, multi-hyphenated star isn't afraid to get loud — and that extends into her beauty philosophy, too.
Mr Lindner's answers were crisp, fluent and peppered with hyphenated Anglicisms: "cutting-edge", "pro-market", "B-to-B".
Haynes also dropped the word "husband" from his bio, as well as his hyphenated married name, Haynes-Leatham.
But so, Jason doesn't know the names of this random blogger, let alone this double hyphenated, weird name.
Even more telling, Haynes dropped the word "husband" and his hyphenated married name, "Haynes-Leatham," from his Instagram profile.
And the two sides, the two poles of the Democratic Party, first openly accepted their hyphenated fate in 2012.
A blog post from 2007 describes a flyer having trouble with booking a ticket because of a hyphenated last name.
It also made it harder to rally black Brazilians round a hyphenated identity of the sort that unites African-Americans.
That's what a lot of hyphenated Americans say to themselves when they glom onto the larger minority groups: close enough.
Hyphenated names are becoming especially common, as they allow children to have both parents' last names, according to Ms. Christensen.
Georgia presents its own obstacles, though: It only allows one spouse in a marriage to take on a hyphenated name.
Here, progressives are supposed to be comfortable with the idea of hyphenated identities and overlapping ethnic, sexual and political affinities.
The reality star even said that she "cannot wait to change [her] name," adding that she plans on getting it hyphenated.
Indeed, I'm often struck by the gap between white Australians who insist everyone is welcomed in Australia — no hyphenated identities here!
This collection has everything to do with its characters' hyphenated identity and yet, somehow, nothing to do with it at all.
Ms. Sherrill is often introduced as "Navy pilot, federal prosecutor and mother of four," as if the descriptions should be hyphenated.
Resistance for me is owning my multi-hyphenated identity with humble swagger and calling President Trump "Bannon's Poodle" on cable television.
College campuses are the only homes my father and I have ever had; they are the places that bridge our hyphenated identities.
Both airlines and technology have evolved plenty in that span and yet flying with a hyphenated name is as bad as ever.
And recently, we sat down with the 26-year-old multi-hyphenated star at Lord & Taylor to get some more beauty dish.
The multi-hyphenated star has proven to be a veritable fountain of youth since coming on the scene over 13 years ago.
After all, we have long been a hyphenated citizenry; our children are tutored — or are supposed to be — in E pluribus unum.
I first submitted the puzzle with FAULT INSURANCE ("Second serve in tennis, essentially"), but I hadn't realized that "no-fault" was hyphenated.
There is even a hint of Queens: Most addresses in Fair Lawn are hyphenated, some with numbers as bizarre as 0-01.
This hyphenated line, a burst of rapid fire …I was trying to complete a sentence in my head, but it kept stuttering.
Fortunately, this is one rule that need not drive anyone mad: a group of words used as a single modifier should be hyphenated.
The Hyphenated Lives series includes mutated fauna and flora that manifest as creatures subverting their prescribed roles as icons of nationhood and state.
This newsletter is written with the assistance of Arman Tabatabai from New York Updated: I re-hyphenated my H1-Bs to H-1Bs.
I had seen her music relayed in epic hyphenated descriptions like "urban-cyber-electronic-sugar-dance-pop", but what does that even mean?
He wasn't really the jester anymore: he was a Serious Artist, respected by Serious Critics and Slate columnists, Oscar-winning and multi-hyphenated.
There's more ... Hannah also explains why she decided to change her last name -- instead of keeping "Davis" or even going the hyphenated route.
Hyphenated stories exist across western societies (and beyond), and he constantly uses his art and status to make sure they become more visible.
Some suggested that we hyphenate our names, a middle-of-the-road approach that was quickly batted down by one such hyphenated friend.
Rather than an exclusive nationalism rooted in ethnicity, Scottish nationalists speak of an inclusive civic nationalism that can accommodate American-style hyphenated identities.
In "Hyphenated lives (Ti-Khor)" (2015), the artist combines the Bengal tiger and the Markhor, a species of wild goat found in northeastern Afghanistan.
Questions should be asked, like how did Jefferson's America become a federation of sociological, political and cultural tribes and hyphenated ethnicities instead of states?
Each side regards the hyphenated identity as a concession to the other, rather than both rejoicing in a new stripe in a rainbow nation.
In August, shortly after we published a Technology Quarterly on the topic, they ruled that "cryptocurrency" should become one word, rather than two hyphenated ones.
Instead of playing the scenario for laughs, though, the director Minhal Baig treats her character's hyphenated identity and her search for independence with quiet respect.
Also, with Jyun being mixed-race and me being first-generation Chinese-American, we are fascinated by these stories of the hyphenated or in-between experience.
Either we'd give our son a hyphenated last name, which forces our child to compromise over our disagreement, or he'd just take one of our names.
The seven-event heptathlon will renew the rivalry between Ennis-Hill and Theisen-Eaton in what has become known as the battle of the hyphenated names.
On the last day of the month, Jay-Z (whose name is now hyphenated once again) released his new album, 4:44, on his streaming service Tidal.
The bold, multi-hyphenated star isn't afraid to speak her mind (especially when it comes to taboo topics) — and we love her all the more for it.
Americans must return to the unity we felt the day after 9/11 when there were no hyphenated white-Americans, black-Americans, Hispanic-Americans or gay-Americans.
Time's Lev Grossman blames our increasingly "multicultural, transcontinental, hyphenated identities and our globalized, displaced, deracinated lives" for why any consensus about a single voice now seems impossible.
To us, there is no hyphenated identity," Noah quoted the French diplomat in the letter, adding that the comedian's comments about the players seem to "deny their Frenchness.
Onika Tanya Maraj is the singer's full name, though the addition of Petty hyphenated at the end alongside Monday's date suggests that Minaj is now a married woman. 
"Bring us 10 million of those a year, if they want to be productive members and make America great, and be American, not a hyphenated American," he said.
His presidential campaign organised supporters' clubs for ethnic Germans, Scandinavians and other hyphenated Americans (aides even formed a "Wheelmen" club for daredevil fans of a modern novelty, the bicycle).
It's been a busy year for the multi-hyphenated star, who, in addition to lighting up screens both big and small everywhere, launched her second clothing line, Daya by Zendaya.
Reena Saini Kallat's series Hyphenated Lives speaks to these ideas and offers a point of entry into the artist's personal exploration of the ways that identities are perceived and constructed.
I grew up in a predominantly white and upper middle class town and realized, at a young age, that people would never be able to see past my hyphenated identity.
Less than a decade later, Cornelia Bradley-Martin (who arbitrarily hyphenated her husband's name) lowered the bar to squeeze about 800 professed aristocrats into the old Waldorf Astoria on Feb.
My journey to being a multi-hyphenated creative was one that took time and a lot of mental untangling of what I believed success was and what others thought of me.
However, New York state recognizes a name change by marriage only if she tacks on her married name as a hyphenated double-barrel, or if she drops her maiden name altogether.
A visceral understanding of working class issues, regardless of hyphenated identity issues that marginalize the white working class, is the only thing that will bring the Democratic Party back from oblivion.
When the agency changed its name in 2003, it hyphenated "Geospatial-Intelligence," so that, according to this person, it could have a vaunted three-letter acronym, like the FBI, CIA, and NSA.
The couple, who are proud of their heritage (English, Dutch, Irish and German) but resist hyphenated labels like "Euro-American" or "African-American," told me they bought the house in the 1970s.
Goreyland favors Victorian and Edwardian settings and costumes, is darkly comic to the point of absurdism and is hard to categorize except with hyphenated terms like camp-macabre, ironic-gothic or dark-whimsy.
"I think of the art just as life and the things I do are all just part of it," Yung Jake wrote, as a way of explaining his relaxed and hyphenated art practice.
Actually, minus the moniker, that's all pretty much true... So maybe Weiss-Wolf (who hyphenated her last name because that's how much she loves Wonder Woman) is as much a superhero as reality will permit.
Still, "The Disaster Artist" -- James Franco's hyphenated turn as star, producer and director -- deftly falls into that comedic pantheon, joining the likes of "Ed Wood" in making an entertaining movie about a truly terrible one.
But though he writes with a South Asian and British specificity, his descriptions of disconnection translate to other hyphenated identities, particularly those that exist outside the typically black-or-white way we look at ethnicity.
This is a long way of saying I apologize if you were tripped up by the hyphenated mini-theme, two entries I hope were much easier for you to parse than TWOD was for me.
In Georgia, 750,000 more names were purged between 2012 and 2016 than between 2008 and 2012 because of a policy removing voters when information did not accurately match state databases properly — including not having hyphenated names.
One could argue that there is by now a tendency for a literal interpretation of visual metaphors like those in the Hyphenated Lives series, given that ideas of identity and nationhood demand a different kind of reimagining.
Part of Mr. Castro's candidacy will be educating voters about what it means to be an acculturated Mexican-American, identifying not with Mexico or "los gringos," but as a uniquely American, comfortably hyphenated blend of the two.
Barring a handful of requisite crowd-pleasing bookings, most artists at this year's festival fall under that umbrella, or any number of hyphenated subgenres therein—psych folk, grunge psych, shoegaze, psych punk, art rock, noise psych, et cetera.
" He continued, "It's about time that these 'hyphenated-Americans' take pride in the land that they now call home and fix the problems here before they rally and call for our intervening in matters that don't concern us abroad.
This show doesn't get enough praise for its portrayal of Indian-American Cecelia Parekh (Hannah Simone) — but then again, the very fact that we don't talk about it proves that team New Girl makes hyphenated identity natural and relatable.
Pom-poms — basically, a hyphenated derivative of the idiomatic french word for "ball of flair" — have apparently (according to the many meisters of Wikipedia) been popping up all over ornamental clothing for hundreds of years, from European military caps to South American serapes.
Beckerman's otherwise informative review underemphasizes the possibility of actually living here without feeling anything but American: not a hyphenated American, just one who feels that this is his home and that being American is the only identity that is comfortable or necessary.
Shteyngart's fourth and latest novel, "Lake Success," veers from its forebears by placing a Long Island-born financier at its center, rather than Russian émigrés or their children, and for the most part shuns themes of transnational displacement and the hyphenated existence.
Colie Christensen, founder of NewlyNamed, which provides online and shippable name change kits for newlyweds, said the most common alternative name changes she sees are couples combining their last names into one, both spouses taking a hyphenated name, and husbands taking wives' names.
A 2015 Google Consumer Survey conducted by The New York Times found that it was becoming increasingly popular for women to keep their maiden names, but still, only 20 percent of women were doing so, and only 10 percent were choosing alternative options like hyphenated names.
While university students who have been through the process of "becoming French" are encouraged to learn Arabic, any attempt to teach it in public schools, she added, has been perceived by some as a deviation from that path, one that will promote a hyphenated identity of French-Arabs.
Here are the books mentioned in this week's "What We're Reading": "The Age of Insight" by Eric Kandel "The Driftless Area" by Tom Drury "The Hyphenated Family" by Hermann Hagedorn "The Woman in White" by Wilkie Collins We would love to hear your thoughts about this episode, and about the Book Review's podcast in general.
In "Of Golf and Ghouls: The Prose Style of Justice Scalia," a 38-page article that appeared in 2003 in The Journal of the Legal Writing Institute, Yury Kapgan offered a close analysis of just what made the justice's writing so distinctive, from his use of striking metaphors to his strategic deployment of capital letters and multi-hyphenated phrases.
"Hip-hop as a form was this space in-between that almost mirrored the hyphenated experience of being Asian American: being Asian or American—but not really being one or the other, and trying to find identity," said Dr. grace jun, a professor of dance at the University of California San Diego whose work focuses on race, gender, and class representations in movement.
The show, somewhat unimaginatively titled Selena: The Series, will apparently be a coming-of-age story about the pop star, model, actress, designer, and otherwise-hyphenated boss lady's life, chronicling her rise from a no-name singer in her dad's Texas restaurant to the internationally renowned "Queen of Tejano music," all before she was tragically killed in 1995 at just 23.
For Strahan, who has already made the jump to becoming a capital "C" celebrity, this is another hyphen to add to his multi-hyphenated career of all-star-talk-show-host-business-mogul, but for Brady, who may retire as soon as the end of next season (if the Pats make another Super Bowl appearance), there's definitely a sense of what will come next.

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