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Hyphenation of marketing

How to hyphenate marketing

Because it is a word with a single syllable, marketing is not hyphenated. The words that have a single syllable are called monosyllabic words.

marketing
Syllables Count
1
Characters Count
9
Alpha-numeric Characters Count
9
Hyphens Count
0
Haphenation done based on the Knuth-Liang word-division algorithm. The computed hyphenation pattern is: marketing

Definitions of marketing

marketing is defined as:

Definition 1 as verb

  • verb
    To make (products or services) available for sale and promote them.

    Example: We plan to market an ecology model by next quarter.

  • verb
    To sell

    Example: We marketed more this quarter already than all last year!

  • verb
    To deal in a market; to buy or sell; to make bargains for provisions or goods.

Definition 1 as noun

  • noun
    Buying and selling in a market.
  • noun
    The promotion, distribution and selling of a product or service; the work of a marketer; includes market research and advertising.
  • noun
    (up to the 1920s) Shopping, going to market.

Words nearby marketing

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What is hyphenation

Hyphenation is the process of splitting words into syllables and inserting hyphens between them to facilitate the reading of a text. It is also used to divide words when the word cannot fit on a line.

This technique is particularly helpful in fully justified texts, where it aids in creating a uniform edge along both sides of a paragraph. Hyphenation rules vary among languages and even among different publications within the same language. It's a critical component in typesetting, significantly influencing the aesthetics and readability of printed and digital media. For instance, in compound adjectives like 'long-term solution', hyphens clarify relationships between words, preventing misinterpretation. Moreover, hyphenation can alter meanings: 'recreation' differs from 're-creation'.

With the advent of digital text, hyphenation algorithms have become more sophisticated, though still imperfect, sometimes requiring manual adjustment to ensure accuracy and coherence in text layout. Understanding and correctly applying hyphenation rules is therefore not only a matter of linguistic accuracy but also a key aspect of effective visual communication.