SOME vs BOTH: ADJECTIVE
- About; near; more or less; -- used commonly with numerals, but formerly also with a singular substantive of time or distance.
- Not much; a little; moderate.
- A certain; one; -- indicating a person, thing, event, etc., as not known individually, or designated more specifically.
- Consisting of a greater or less portion or sum; composed of a quantity or number which is not stated; -- used to express an indefinite quantity or number. Used also pronominally.
- Remarkable
- Being an unspecified number or quantity.
- Being a portion or an unspecified number or quantity of a whole or group.
- Being a considerable number or quantity.
- Unknown or unspecified by name.
- Being part and perhaps all of a class.
- Considerable in number or quantity.
- Relatively many but unspecified in number
- Relatively much but unspecified in amount or extent
- Quantifier; used with either mass nouns or plural count nouns to indicate an unspecified number or quantity
- A part; a portion; -- used pronominally, and followed sometimes by of.
- One and all. See under All, adv.
- One part … another part; these … those; -- used distributively.
- Certain; those of one part or portion; -- in distinction from other or others.
- (used with count nouns) two considered together; the two
- One and the other; relating to or being two in conjunction.
SOME vs BOTH: ADVERB
- (of quantities) imprecise but fairly close to correct
- Approximately; about.
- Somewhat.
- Of a measurement; approximately, roughly
- N/A
SOME vs BOTH: PRONOUN
- An indefinite or unspecified number or portion.
- An indefinite additional quantity.
- A certain number, at least one.
- An indefinite quantity.
- An indefinite amount, a part.
- The one and the other.
SOME vs BOTH: CONJUNCTION
- N/A
- Used with and to indicate that each of two things in a coordinated phrase or clause is included.
- As well; not only; equally.
- Including both (used with and)
SOME vs BOTH: OTHER WORD TYPES
- Some, as originally used partitively with numbers (AS. feówra sum, one of four, etc.), has come to be an apparent distributive suffix, as in foursome, sevensome.
- The plural some is occasionally used in the possessive.
- In this sense some is very commonly repeated, some … some (or, formerly, other some, as in Acts xvii. 18) meaning ‘a number … others,’ or ‘the rest.’
- A certain quantity, part, or number, as distinguished from the rest: as, some of them are dead; we ate some of our provisions, and gave away the rest.
- A certain person; one.
- Hence A certain number of, stated approximately: in a quasi-adverbial use before a numeral or other word of number: as, a place some seventy miles distant; some four or five of us will be there.
- In logic, at least one, perhaps all; but a few logicians sometimes employ a semidefinite some which implies a part, but not all.
- A certain indefinite or indeterminate quantity or part of; more or less: often so used as to denote a small quantity or a deficiency: as, bring some water; eat some bread.
- In this sense often fallowed by a correlative other or another.
- A; a certain; one: noting a person or thing indefinitely, either as unknown or as unspecified.
- Quantifier
- A suffix used to form adjectives from nouns or adjectives, as mettlesome, blithesome, lonesome, gladsome, gamesome, gruesome, quarrelsome, toothsome, troublesome, wholesome, winsome.
- As; so; ever: used indefinitely after certain adverbs and pronouns, like so, soever.
- In some degree: to some extent; somewhat: as. I am some better; it is some cold.
- (determiner) a remarkable.
- (determiner) A considerable quantity or number of.
- (determiner) A certain, an unspecified or unknown.
- (determiner) An unspecified amount of (something uncountable).
- (determiner) An unspecified quantity or number of.
- (determiner) A certain proportion of, at least one.
- Including the two (terms or notions mentioned): an adverb preceding two coördinate terms (words or phrases) joined by and, and standing thus in an apparent conjunctional correlation, both … and, equivalent to not only … but also. Both is thus used sometimes before three or more coördinate terms.
- The one and the other; the two; the pair or the couple, in reference to two persons or things specially mentioned, and denoting that neither of them is to be excluded, either absolutely or (as with either) as an alternative, from the statement.
- [The genitive both's (ME. bothes, bothers, earlier bother, bathre) is now disused; in the earlier period it was joined usually with the genitive plural of the personal pronoun. Subsequently the simple both, equivalent to of both, was used.
- The two
- (determiner) Each of more than two.
- (determiner) Each of the two; one and the other.
SOME vs BOTH: RELATED WORDS
- Or so, Close to, Approximately, Extraordinary, Unspecified, Roughly, Whatsoever, Around, Whatever, Much, About, Any, Both, Several, Many
- Nor, Them, The, That, Together, Either, Each, Such, Couple, Neither, Those, These, All, Two, Some
SOME vs BOTH: DESCRIBE WORDS
- Just about, Or so, Close to, Approximately, Extraordinary, Unspecified, Roughly, Whatsoever, Around, Whatever, Much, Any, Both, Several, Many
- Nor, Them, The, That, Together, Either, Each, Such, Couple, Neither, Those, These, All, Two, Some
SOME vs BOTH: SENTENCE EXAMPLES
- In addition to passing the exam, here are some common requirements imposed by some state massage licensing boards.
- Some legislative provisions provide that payments under the legislation are exempt from payment: for example, some pensions.
- Note: this guide needs some updates, as some of the information is starting to get outdated.
- PDA closure occurs late in some cases has prompted some investigators to completely withhold retreatment.
- Some jurisdictions also tax some types of business personal property, particularly inventory and equipment.
- We provide here some basic information to help frame some of the issues.
- Each of the manufacturers comes in for some approving, and some disapproving, comments.
- She did do some modeling and some flight attendant work upon graduation.
- Certification or some proof of professional training is required in some states.
- While some states prohibit subrogation, some allow it.
- Though she said she worked hard to both gain and lose the weight, her body seemed to cooperate readily in both directions.
- Your mind, which aids both your body and your love, has mishandled both of them.
- Both strategies must exemplify the products from both approaches by blending findings in order to answer the hypotheses.
- If both dogs can be accommodated, both should be allowed in.
- Overall though, both systems are used for storage and over time the performance offered by both is becoming harder to distinguish.
- Both wore Western clothes, both were plump, smiling almost to the point of beaming and extremely shrewd indeed.
- However when returning a yes and no condition both conditions must be either both categorical or numeric.
- This is an automatic buff that both you and your Pet gains when both are alive.
- Although both the apps look similar, I found myself using both for different purposes altogether.
- We both have passport and both of us are in Bangalore.
SOME vs BOTH: QUESTIONS
- Are antidepressants unnecessarily prescribed for some people?
- What is some historical information about potassium?
- What are some characteristics of cooperative banks?
- What are some problems with performance appraisals?
- What are some examples of institutional discrimination?
- What are some characteristics of Natural Resources?
- What are some interesting facts about archaebacteria?
- What are some similarities between synoptic gospels?
- What are some motivational strategies for students?
- Why are some people so talkative and some people not?
- Is HotSchedules suitable for both managers and employees?
- Can a systems analyst speak both programming languages?
- What originates from both fetal and maternal tissue?
- Are avoidavoidance and Cobra reflexes both passive?
- Is addition multiplication and Division both commutative?
- Are Schwarzschild wormholes traversable in both directions?
- Do Republicans control both branches of government?
- Is hypercholesterolemia inherited from both parents?
- Are cortisone and cortisol both mineralocorticoids?
- Why is yin and Yang considered both a both/and Proposition?