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meaning in context - with and without vs. with or without - English . . . You're probably familiar with the difference between and or conjunction: and 1 used to connect words of the same part of speech, clauses, or sentences that are to be taken jointly "Taken jointly" applied to your situation means both are considered conjunction: or 1 used to link alternatives "Alternatives" mean only one or the other is considered We consider models with and without X
from both within and without outside - English Language Usage Stack . . . I would like to ask native speakers now if using "without" in the sense of "outside" sounds off or strange, especially when it is used in a sentence such as "The ABC serves as the central agency for enquiries from both within and without the US "
Up the creek without a paddle? - English Language Usage Stack Exchange However, if you are downstream without a paddle, then you're in serious trouble, because if you can't paddle back up the creek, it's going to keep taking you further downstream So why in the English language to we say "up the creek" instead of "down the creek"? Does it have something to do with where the expression originates?
Using the word without as a substitute for instead of Use the staircase without a lift or an escalator to save energy Even though the description suggested that there is nothing wrong with it, I felt a bit uneasy about using the word "without" here, as I thought that it would be more natural if it used "instead of" I did some research, and I got the following definition for "without"
meaning - Is the expression As it goes without saying technically . . . See this NGram showing that pronoun it isn't normally included with this particular "set phrase" If you don't include as at the beginning, you'd normally have relativiser that at the end (and no comma) instead: It goes without saying that not all customers are the same (I've no particular preference on that choice)