word choice - Co-Founder, Co-founder, or cofounder?


I've seen all three used and there doesn't seem to be a definitive one that I can find. I'm hedging towards Co-Founder as it's a title, but any clarity would be appreciated.


Edit


If it makes it any clearer, the intended use would be for business cards; so something like:



Name Surname
Co-Founder Some Company




Answer



All are acceptable, so you should follow your judgement.


British usage generally favours rather more hyphens than American usage; I'd use co-founder since cofounder doesn't look all that natural. I'd omit the hyphen in landowner, though, so it depends.


Longman and Collins tend to prefer unhyphenated while Chambers, predictably, insists on the hyphenated form.


If you're using the word in a title (in which you can capitalize every important word) or at the beginning of a sentence, you should always use Co-founder, not Co-Founder; such as:



The Importance of the Co-founder in Contemporary America



For all other usages, just use co-founder.


Comments

Popular posts from this blog

etymology - Origin of "s--t eating grin"

First floor vs ground floor, usage origin

usage - "there doesn't seem" vs. "there don't seem"

pronunciation - Where does the intrusive R come from in “warsh”?

Abbreviation of "Street"

etymology - Since when has "a hot minute" meant a long time?

meaning - What is synonyme of "scale"?