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Guyper Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Regarding either

1."I'd like to apply either for the position A or position B"
2."I'd like to apply either position A or position B"

Hi, I'd like to know if their meaning are interchageable or there is a difference

Thank you
  

Top answer

I'd like to apply for either position A or position B. I'd like to apply either for position A or position B. (Yours are not idiomatic.

  • I'd like to apply for either position A or position B.
  • I'd like to apply either for position A or position B.
  • (Yours are not idiomatic.
  • ")
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2 Answers
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I'd like to apply for either position A or position B.
I'd like to apply either for position A or position B.

(Yours are not idiomatic. The second is ungrammatical without "for.")
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Hi,
1."I'd like to apply either for the position A or position B"
2."I'd like to apply either position A or position B"

Hi, I'd like to know if their meaning are interchageable or there is a difference

Don't say 'the'.
You need to say 'apply for'.
Position the 'either' before the two alternatives.
I'd like to apply for either position A or position

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