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Anonymous Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Expressing two possibilities with whether

Is this rightly put?

The price isn't going to change whether you do it a saturday or sunday so why specify a day.

Thnks
  

Top answer

The price isn't going to change whether you do it ON/OF a S aturday or S unday, so why specify a day. 1. The above is grammatically correct, and the punctuation is better.

  • The price isn't going to change whether you do it ON/OF a S aturday or S unday, so why specify a day.
  • 1.
  • The above is grammatically correct, and the punctuation is better.
  • (Purists might also put a comma before 'whether').
  • Note the capitalization!
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1 Answers
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The price isn't going to change whether you do it ON/OF a Saturday or Sunday, so why specify a day.

1. The above is grammatically correct, and the punctuation is better. (Purists might also put a comma before 'whether'). Note the capitalization!

2. Whether 'on' or 'of' depends whether this is planned as a one-off event, or a regul

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