From something I'm editing:
"This is not the time to have a poor quality inspection."
Unlike yesterday's sentence, which had a less-than-ideal hyphen, this sentence would benefit from a hyphen between "poor" and "quality":
"a poor-quality inspection"
This hyphen makes the sentence smoother for the reader.
the added hyphen causes me to read it as an inspection of poor quality, rather than a quality inspection showing a poor score. is that just silly of me? are there other syntax options?
ReplyDelete*i am now thinking i should have left out the comma in that last comment. commenting on this blog is a little intimidating.
ReplyDeleteYou're right, Sara Elisabeth. The sentence is talking about an inspection of poor quality (a poor-quality inspection). Without the hyphen, you could read it as a quality inspection that is poor. In this case the sentence is talking about a home inspection that is of poor quality.
ReplyDeleteOther syntax options include "an inspection of poor quality," but that is a bit wordy for my taste.