lifecycle, life cycle or life-cycle?
http://www.techwr-l.com/archives/0604/techwhirl-0604-00604.html
generally starts open (life cycle), migrates to hyphenated (life-cycle), and
ends up closed (lifecycle). Many of us have been in the business long enough
to remember when online help was on-line help or even "on line" help. Jeesh,
when I was a kid, there was a hyphen in cooperation! To quote CMS 14 (sorry, 15 is at work and I'm home), para 6.38:
---begin quote---
For some years now, the trend in spelling compound words has been away from
the use of hyphens. There seems to be a tendency to spell compounds solid as
soon as acceptance warrants their being considered permanent compounds, and
otherwise to spell them open. This is a trend, not a rule, but it is
sometimes helpful, when deciding how to spell some new combination, to
remember that the trend exists.
---end quote--- So, if you believe that the two words "life" and "cycle" are a temporary
compound (and that all the fuss about it in the software industry is just a
flash in the pan <g>), leave them open. If, however, you think that
lifecycle has earned the title of permanent compound in your industry, spell
it closed. HTH!
-Sue Gallagher > An intelligent, literate reader will wonder whether by "lifecycle" the
> writer intended something different from "life cycle", and, if not, then
> why the writer didn't use the standard English noun. Is it because the
> writer didn't know any better and couldn't be arsed to look it up in a
> proper dictionary? Is it because of a misprint? Is there a missing
> paragraph somewhere that would have explained the similarities and
> differences between a life cycle and a "lifecycle"?
RE: lifecycle or life-cycle or life cycle
What ever happened to the natural evolution of language? A compoundgenerally starts open (life cycle), migrates to hyphenated (life-cycle), and
ends up closed (lifecycle). Many of us have been in the business long enough
to remember when online help was on-line help or even "on line" help. Jeesh,
when I was a kid, there was a hyphen in cooperation! To quote CMS 14 (sorry, 15 is at work and I'm home), para 6.38:
---begin quote---
For some years now, the trend in spelling compound words has been away from
the use of hyphens. There seems to be a tendency to spell compounds solid as
soon as acceptance warrants their being considered permanent compounds, and
otherwise to spell them open. This is a trend, not a rule, but it is
sometimes helpful, when deciding how to spell some new combination, to
remember that the trend exists.
---end quote--- So, if you believe that the two words "life" and "cycle" are a temporary
compound (and that all the fuss about it in the software industry is just a
flash in the pan <g>), leave them open. If, however, you think that
lifecycle has earned the title of permanent compound in your industry, spell
it closed. HTH!
-Sue Gallagher > An intelligent, literate reader will wonder whether by "lifecycle" the
> writer intended something different from "life cycle", and, if not, then
> why the writer didn't use the standard English noun. Is it because the
> writer didn't know any better and couldn't be arsed to look it up in a
> proper dictionary? Is it because of a misprint? Is there a missing
> paragraph somewhere that would have explained the similarities and
> differences between a life cycle and a "lifecycle"?