Hyphenator vs Genii - What's the difference?
hyphenator | genii |
One who, or that which, hyphenates.
*{{quote-news, year=2007, date=October 7, author=Charles Mcgrath, title=Death-Knell. Or Death Knell., work=New York Times
, passage=The greatest hyphenator ever was Shakespeare (or Shak-speare in some contemporary spellings) because he was so busy adding new words, many of them compounds, to English: “sea-change,” “leap-frog,” “bare-faced,” “fancy-free.” }} (Roman mythology) ; guardian spirits
*
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As nouns the difference between hyphenator and genii
is that hyphenator is one who, or that which, hyphenates while genii is (roman mythology) ; guardian spirits or genii can be .hyphenator
English
Noun
(en noun)citation