Sunday, August 15, 2010

Either II

Either of

We use either of before a pronoun or a determiner (the, my, these...)

e.g. I don't like either of them.
e.g. I don't like either of my math teachers.

We can use either alone if a noun has already been mentioned.

e.g. Would you like coffee or tea? I don't mind. Either.

Please note that this is a sentence fragment. It is fine for conversational English, but should be avoided in written English.

1 comment:

  1. Hey, I'm Mariana, I was Renata's student.

    She is very special! I miss her!
    Ok, no drama, right? :D

    Do you live in Canada! Very nice! I would to know how does it work the "exchange program"? Can you tell me about this in Canada?
    How does the life in you country? What's the weather like in Canada? Do you live in Ottawa? Tell me about your city, about people, teenagers, shcools, jobs, food...
    Thanks Gringo, see you!
    Kisses, Mariana

    ReplyDelete