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either
[ee-ther, ahy-ther]
adjective
one or the other of two.
You may sit at either end of the table.
each of two; the one and the other.
There are trees on either side of the river.
pronoun
one or the other.
There are two roads into the town, and you can take either. Either will do.
conjunction
(a coordinating conjunction that, when preceding a word or statement followed by the disjunctive or, serves to emphasize the possibility of choice).
Either come or write.
adverb
also; too; as well; to the same degree (used after negative clauses coordinated by and, or, or nor, or after negative subordinate clauses).
He's not fond of parties, and I'm not either. If you don't come, she won't come either.
either
/ ˈaɪðə, ˈiːðə /
determiner
one or the other (of two)
either coat will do
( as pronoun )
either is acceptable
both one and the other
there were ladies at either end of the table
(coordinating) used preceding two or more possibilities joined by "or"
you may have either cheese or a sweet
adverb
(used with a negative) used to indicate that the clause immediately preceding is a partial reiteration of a previous clause
John isn't a liar, but he isn't exactly honest either
Usage
Grammar Note
Pronunciation Note
Word History and Origins
Word History and Origins
Origin of either1
Example Sentences
When the participants tried to end a conversation, researchers had the companion either reply with the same manipulative farewells they had observed popular AI companions use or, in the control condition, say goodbye.
Western officials have grown increasingly worried that al Qaeda, the stronger of the two Islamist groups in West Africa, might actually win control of either Burkina Faso or Mali.
Being named on either list makes companies subject to onerous licensing requirements on exports and technology transfers.
Many companies that scream the loudest about the bubble are either exaggerating the threat or fundamentally misunderstanding what’s actually unfolding.
That’s when one satellite sidles up to another and either fixes it or kills it, depending on whose satellite it is and what day of the week it is.
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