What I see all the time is when I go grocery shopping and I pick up some fruit. I"ll think in terms of (inclusive/exclusive) "or" or "and".
"If I'm getting banana's, I'm also either getting blueberries or raspberries". "I'm either getting blueberries or raspberries" "I have to get either blueberries or raspberries for my cereal tomorrow morning"
Say you're at a dinner party and the guests, inexplicably, have obsessive preferences about the seating plan. Everyone is shouting. "No way am I sitting next to Hugo." "If I sit here, at least Linda or Fred must sit next to me, because they are great food-passers." "I don't want to sit next to Hugo, either."
As all the hell is swirling around, and the party appears to disintegrate, you calmly take a paper and pencil (not a pen, of course) and sit down at a nearby table...
Comments
If it's an orange from Florida you know it's always delicious.
OF-->D
"If I'm getting banana's, I'm also either getting blueberries or raspberries".
"I'm either getting blueberries or raspberries"
"I have to get either blueberries or raspberries for my cereal tomorrow morning"
Say you're at a dinner party and the guests, inexplicably, have obsessive preferences about the seating plan. Everyone is shouting. "No way am I sitting next to Hugo." "If I sit here, at least Linda or Fred must sit next to me, because they are great food-passers." "I don't want to sit next to Hugo, either."
As all the hell is swirling around, and the party appears to disintegrate, you calmly take a paper and pencil (not a pen, of course) and sit down at a nearby table...