In fact, I hardly use hyphen while writing. However, while I was writing today's essay, I though it would be better if I try it out. Therefore, I would really appreciate it if someone could let me know whether the usage of hyphen in the following sentence is appropriate or not. I wrote the previous sentences as well in order to provide the reader with the context.
Furthermore, accidents on motorways could be lethal. The predominant reason for this is the speed of vehicles usually much higher than on normal roads. Nevertheless, it is the same reason - the maximum allowed speed of cars - that the majority of highway drivers use it.
Nevertheless, it is for the same reason—the maximum allowed speed of cars—that the majority of highway drivers use it. We use a hyphen to separate parts of words ( well-known, first-born, middle-class ) We don't use a hyphen to set off phrases. For that we use an em-dash.
New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.
Nevertheless, it is for the same reason—the maximum allowed speed of cars—that the majority of highway drivers use it.
We use a hyphen to separate parts of words (well-known, first-born, middle-class) We don't use a hyphen to set off phrases. For that we use an em-dash.
I rewrote your sentence using em-dashes in academic style.
To produce an em-dash, hol