neither

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It is called in ancient geography Adurnus_, and is probably from the same root as the French Adour C The river Adur, which passes by Shoreham, is the same name as the Adour, a great river in the Western Pyrenees This coincidence seems to show that it is neither a Basque word, nor a Saxon.

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Definitions (17)

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  1. adjective Not one or the other; not either: Neither shoe feels comfortable.
  2. pronoun Not either one; not the one or the other: Neither of the twins is here. Neither will do. Neither of them is incorrect.
  3. conjunction Not either; not in either case. Used with the correlative conjunction nor: Neither we nor they want it. She neither called nor wrote. I got neither the gift nor the card.

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Etymologies (3)

Toggle American Heritage etymologies American Heritage Dictionary (1)

  1. Middle English, from Old English nāwther, nāhwæther (influenced by æghwæther, ægther, either) : , not; see ne in Indo-European roots + hwæther, which of two; see kwo- in Indo-European roots.

Toggle Century etymologies Century Dictionary (2)

  1. from Middle English neither, neyther, nethir, also nather, nawther, nowther, nouther, nother, from Anglo-Saxon nāther, nāthor, nōther, nāuther, nāuthær, nāwther, contr. of nāhwæther (= OFries. nahweder, nauder, nouder, ner), adjective, pron., and conjunction, neither, from ne, not, + āhwæther, āwther, etc., either: see either. The form neither conforms in spelling and pron. to either; it would reg. be only nother (nō′-ŦHė;r), there being no Anglo-Saxon form of ǣgther (whence English either) with the negative. The variation in the pronunciation of neither depends on that of either. See either.
  2. from Middle English neither, neyther, etc., nawther, nowther, nouther, nother, etc., contr. also nor, which now prevails as the second form in the correlation neithernor; from neither, adjective and pron., being the same as either with the negative prefixed: see neither, adjective and pron.
 

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/ˈniðə/
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