![]() So, either/or sets up thisĬhoice between two options and neither/nor rejects both options, so, neither Jia nor Becca liked Howard. The opposite of either/or is neither/nor. So, we're going to say, or, later in the sentence,Īs in, what is reputed to be Oscar Wilde's last words, either the wallpaper goes, or I do. That you're going to have to be choosing between two things, With either or, either, I don't know how you say it. ![]() When you see one, it's probably time to use the other. Or, etymologically, are related together in some way. So, correlative conjunctions, there we see it, definitionally ![]() So, we're just going to say, that just means relative or, related. That the word relative is, like, your aunt or, your uncle or, This co part comes from the Latin, cum, meaning with or, together. Pretty ugly word, correlative, like, it's kind ofĬomplicated looking but, let's break it down. Grammarians, today we're going to be talking aboutĬorrelative conjunctions and I know this this looks like
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