either-or
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English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Adjective
[edit]either-or (not comparable)
- Describing a situation in which there are only two choices.
- Describing a situation in which there is a choice between two different plans of action, but both together are not possible.
Noun
[edit]either-or (plural either-ors)
- A situation in which there is a choice between two different plans of action, but both together are not possible.
- 2023 March 13, Naureen Khan, “Doug Emhoff Wants Men to Clear the Path for More Kamalas”, in Cosmopolitan[1]:
- “There’s a misperception out there that if some women are succeeding, that if many women are succeeding, it’s at the detriment of men,” he said. “When we support women, as men, it’s a good thing. The more women that succeed, there’s benefits to families, benefits to the economy, and benefits to our country. It’s not an either/or.”
- 2024 May 13, Becky Tunstall and others, “Letter: Underused housing — why it’s part of the solution too”, in Financial Times[2]:
- Using existing housing better and building new homes are not either/ors but complementary. Doing both will mean a faster (and greener) solution.
Further reading
[edit]- “either-or”, in Cambridge English Dictionary, Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, 1999–present.