Hyphenation of epiphanies
How to hyphenate epiphanies
Because it is a word with a single syllable, epiphanies is not hyphenated. The words that have a single syllable are called monosyllabic words.
- Syllables Count
- 1
- Characters Count
- 10
- Alpha-numeric Characters Count
- 10
- Hyphens Count
- 0
Definitions of epiphanies
epiphanies is defined as:
Definition 1 as noun
- nounThe appearance of Jesus Christ to the Magi on the twelfth day after Christmas.
- nounAn annual Christian feast celebrating this event.
- nounThe day of the celebration, January 6th, or sometimes (in Western Christianity), the Sunday between January 2nd and 8th.
- nounThe season or time of the Christian church year either from the Epiphany feast day to Shrove Tuesday (the day before Ash Wednesday, the start of Lent) or from the Epiphany feast day to the feast of the Presentation of Christ in the Temple.
Definition 1 as noun
- nounAn illuminating realization or discovery, often resulting in a personal feeling of elation, awe, or wonder.
Example: It came to her in an epiphany what her life's work was to be.
- nounA manifestation or appearance of a divine or superhuman being.
Words nearby epiphanies
- epiparasite
- epiparodos
- epipastic
- epipedometry
- epipelagic
- epiperipheral
- epipetalous
- epiphanic
- (epiphanies)
- epiphanise
- epiphanised
- epiphanising
- epiphanize
- epiphanized
- epiphanizing
- epiphanous
- epiphany
The hottest word splits in English (US)
See what terms are trending and getting hyphenated by users right now.
What is hyphenation
Hyphenation is the process of dividing words across lines in print or on websites. It involves inserting hyphens (-) where a word breaks to continue on the next line.
Proper hyphenation improves readability by reducing the unevenness of word spacing and unnecessary large gaps. It also helps avoid confusion that may occur when part of a word carries over. Ideal hyphenation should break words according to pronunciation and syllables. Most word processors and publishing apps have automated tools to handle hyphenation effectively based on language rules and dictionaries. Though subtle, proper hyphenation improves overall typography and reading comfort.