Quote:
Originally Posted by mi2az
I can answer this one.
G-d's name is Holy so we dare not write it out. If you were to have journals, papers, books with it spelled out, as a praticing Jew, you would need to bury the articles with the name of G-d with a Jewish person when they die, you do not throw the name of HaShem in the garbage or shed them in the paper shreader.
We also do not speak his name, like HaShem Translates to "The Name" but is meant for G-d.
So, putting the hyphen is to give great respect as not to wipe/delete/blot out his name in case we need to dispose of the papers it is written on.
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Sorry but only some what you say is true.
One would not have to bury words unless written in the holy-tongue, Hebrew. They are not buried with people when they die. They are merely buried in/near a cemetery.
The hypenation is merely a sign of respect and care when using G-d's Name in any form.
Just trying not propogate more myth - we're here to set the record straight and add some clarity!