THE
DISTRIBUTIVES
EACH,
EVERY, EITHER, NEITHER
These distributive
words are normally used with singular nouns, and are placed before the
noun.
Each, either
and neither can be used with plural nouns but must
be followed by 'of':
Each
is a way of seeing the members of a group as individuals:
- Each
child received a present.
- Each
of the children received a present.
Every
is a way of seeing a group as a series of members:
- Every
child in the world deserves affection.
It can also
express different points in a series, especially with time expressions:
- Every
third morning John goes jogging.
- This
magazine is published every
other week.
Either
and Neither are concerned with distribution
between two things - either is positive, neither
is negative:
- Which chair
do you want? Either
chair will do.
- I can
stay at either
hotel, they are both good
- There
are two chairs here. You can take either
of them.
- Neither
chair is any good, they're both too small.
- Which
chair do you want? Neither
of them - they're both too small.
.