I think you should be at least a bit excited. This one is a photograph of a stone hill-fort called Dùn Eochla, on Inishmore (the largest of the three Aran Islands, off the west coast of Ireland). Somewhere I have a photograph of my own, taken back in March 2001, from pretty much exactly the same spot. I was quite excited when I recognised it and realised I'd been there.
There's no reason why the hyphenation should be consistent.
The first answer is "Not at all excited. (That's all that's needed.) The photos have to be of somewhere. (As an unnecessary adjunct.)"
The second answer is "A bit excited (wouldn't we all be to some degree?) - it's always nice to see places you know (a separated but related phrase that belongs with the first one)".
All perfectly reasonable. But the thing that's driving me slightly spare now that I've noticed it is that the second phrase doesn't end with a full stop. That is what's making my eye twitch metaphorically.
I didn't notice until you said anything, at which point I immediately noticed that you used a hyphen where you might have used an m-dash after "a bit excited" :)
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Hyphenation
The first answer is "Not at all excited. (That's all that's needed.) The photos have to be of somewhere. (As an unnecessary adjunct.)"
The second answer is "A bit excited (wouldn't we all be to some degree?) - it's always nice to see places you know (a separated but related phrase that belongs with the first one)".
All perfectly reasonable. But the thing that's driving me slightly spare now that I've noticed it is that the second phrase doesn't end with a full stop. That is what's making my eye twitch metaphorically.
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