English Language & Usage Asked on May 17, 2021
I’ve asked How does one dogleg from Florida to a sun-synchronous orbit? in Space Exploration SE about the path that a rocket takes during launch, or actually the ground-track of its path.
If the rocket launching from Florida were to go into a polar orbit, it would have to do some kind of dogleg maneuver. I’m still waiting to see exactly what this means.
If I look in Wikipedia’s Dogleg disambiguation page, I see three spellings now see two spellings; dog-leg, dogleg. I’m pretty sure I’ve seen "dog leg" in other places as well. I’m using dogleg in the following:
A dogleg maneuver is when a satellite doglegs, executing one dogleg after another, following along a doglegged or dogleg-shaped path…
but can I just use any spelling I want, or are there preferred ways to do this?
There is a common historical pattern in English with adjective-noun or noun-noun pairs that become set phrases. First, a noun is used as a modifier of another noun, for example . Then as this becomes a set phrase, the pronunciation shifts the stress from the modified noun backwards to the modifier which has lost a lot of its significance as a modifier and is turning from somewhat of a prefix to an integral part of a full word. At this point in spelling the pair gets a hyphen. Then eventually, they can be written as a single word.
Sometimes the middle hyphenated stage is skipped, sometimes spelling is altered. And sometimes it gets stuck in one stage.
For the pair 'dog' and 'leg', it seems that the online dictionaries are all over the place.
It should be noted that:
Correct answer by Mitch on May 17, 2021
If you look closely at the ODO (Oxford Dictionary Online), they claim that dogleg is American English, while dog-leg is British English. They could have made this clearer, but if you're maintaining an on-line dictionary, it's hard to get everything right.
If you look at Google Ngrams, this is more or less true, although both versions of English use both forms. And the one-word form is catching up with the hyphenated form in British English. I suspect it will eventually become dominant in both places1
The two-word form isn't at all common in either AmE or BrE – I don't see any reason to use it.
1 This is a fairly standard evolution for hyphenated words in English; for example, to-day and to-morrow used to be hyphenated.
Answered by Peter Shor on May 17, 2021
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