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Either is an English pronoun, adjective, and conjunction, meaning one, or the other, of two. Its origin is from Old English ǽghweþer, which literally analyses as a compound word "any - whether."


Either-or means "one, or the other, but not both."


Pronunciation

Either has two different pronunciations in modern English. The pronunciation "ee-ther" /ˈiːðə(ɹ)/ (IPA) is usually encountered in American English, and is the pronunciation of the majority of English speakers. The pronunciation "eye-ther" /ˈaɪðə(ɹ)/ is associated with British English and Canadian English, but it is not universal in either place, nor in Australian English and other dialects that take their lead from British English.


A recurring urban legend says that the eye-ther pronunciation originated with King George I or another of the Hanoverian kings of Great Britain; the king was a German who did not speak English as a native language, and was misled by English spelling. The new-modelled royal pronunciation was imitated by his courtiers, and as such became a prestige form among those subject to their influence. At this remove, this tale is hard to confirm or disprove.


A Gershwin song, Let's Call the Whole Thing Off, opens with the words "You say ee-ther and I say eye-ther", and concerns a couple who lament the strain put on their relationship by pronunciation differences (and the different social backgrounds which they imply). In the end, happily, love conquers phonetics.


The 'ee-ther' pronunciation forms, with the word 'ether' one of the few minimal pairs demonstrating that the difference between the voiced dental fricative and the unvoiced dental fricative is phonemic in English.


Usage

A frequent difficulty in English usage concerns the permissibility of using either to refer to more than one alternative. Generally, either refers to exactly two alternatives. When there are more, linguistic prescriptivists counsel the use of any. One generally accepted exception to this rule is when either is used as a conjunction to introduce a string of either . . . or alternatives:

  • Either she will sink, or swim, or get out of the pool.

Any is not used as a conjunction, and cannot be used in this context.


Logic, law, and philosophy

Either and or are occasionally misleading terms in the sometimes loose interface between English and logic. They can be used to mean a simple logical disjunction between two alternatives (either one, or the other, or both); but either . . . or frequently implies an exclusive disjunction between two incompatible alternatives.


The inherent ambiguity in either and or is occasionally of import in law, such as in the interpretation of statutes and contracts. In the law of investments, an "either/or" order is an order given to a stockbroker, for which the execution of one automatically cancels the other; this is typically done to combine a "buy limit" order, which will be executed if the price is below a certain point, and a "buy stop" order, executed if the price is above that point.


In philosophy, the first book Søren Kierkegaard published under a pseudonym was titled Either/Or (Danish: Enten/Eller). Written under the name Victor Eremita (Latin: the Victorious Hermit), the book contains his reflections on aesthetics and ethics, and argued against the Hegelian dialectics of thesis, antithesis, and synthesis; Kierkegaard concludes that neither aesthetics nor ethics offer a way out of the human race's existential despair, and concludes that only a leap of faith can solve that problem, arguing that making such a leap cannot have, and does not need, a rational justification.


  Results from FactBites:
 
§ 26. either. 1. Grammar. The American Heritage Book of English Usage. 1996 (489 words)
When using either as a conjunction, you can apply it to more than two elements in a series: She left her glove either at the convenience store, the library, or the playground.
But when either is followed by of and a plural noun, it is often used with a plural verb: Either of the parties have enough support to form a government.
When all the elements in an either … or construction (or a neither … nor construction) used as the subject of a sentence are singular, the verb is singular: Either Eve or Herb has been invited.
either (475 words)
We met either in some public place or at my hotel, where I entertained him as freely as I might without appearing to be prompted by charity.
They were covered from head to foot with mud, and their faces were bleeding either from having been kicked or from the stones; they looked like corpses, but the crowd was so dense that I got only a few momentary glimpses of the wretched creatures.
His eyes had the brightness of fever, there was a hectic flush upon either cheek, and dark crusts clung to his lips; the thin hands upon the coverlet twitched incessantly, his voice was croaking and spasmodic.
  More results at FactBites »


 
 

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