BOTH definition and meaning | Collins English Dictionary You use both when you are referring to two people or things and saying that something is true about each of them She cried out in fear and flung both arms up to protect her face Put both vegetables into a bowl and crush with a potato masher Both is also a quantifier
Both - Grammar - Cambridge Dictionary We don’t use both with a negative verb; we use either instead: There was not a considerable difference in percentages for either sex in terms of having a Bachelor’s degree
Both and reasoning - Wikipedia Both and is an academic concept which refers to a form of reasoning which resists binary or either or styles of thinking [1][2] Unlike dualistic styles of reasoning, both and means that between two options, both can be valid, or that their opposition may present opportunities for dialectical synthesis, rather than a complete rejection of one
both - Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English Online • You use both or both of before a determiner such as ‘the’, ‘these’, or ‘my’: Both (of) the women were tall Both (of) her parents are dead Don’t say: the both women | her both parents • You use both after a pronoun: We both come from Scotland
both - WordReference. com Dictionary of English (coordinating) used preceding words, phrases, or clauses joined by and, used to emphasize that not just one, but also the other of the joined elements is included: both she and her sister enjoyed the play, both new and exciting