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[[File:Andor.png|thumb|right|500px|for extra cosmological points, try the preferred EU formulation.]] | {{a|plainenglish|[[File:Andor.png|thumb|right|500px|for extra cosmological points, try the preferred EU formulation.]]}} | ||
{{f|And/or}} is the [[mediocre lawyer|lawyer]]’s equivalent of a damp kipper handshake. Avoid it. | |||
“{{f|And/or}}” ''means'' “{{f|or}}”, because “{{f|or}}” ''includes'' “{{f|and}}”. | |||
That’s it. | |||
“{{f| | ===In [[tedious]] detail=== | ||
“{{f|And/or}}” has a face only a mother could love. It is borne of the [[fear]] that, when considering alternatives ''any'' of which leads to a given outcome, things might somehow be different if they ''all'' occur. | |||
There is no grounds for this fear. Logically, this is how one defines {{f|and}} and {{f|or}}: | There is no grounds for this fear. Logically, this is how one defines {{f|and}} and {{f|or}}: | ||
:{{and}} | |||
:{{or}} | |||
}} | |||
In | Besides, [[and/or]] is not just ugly; it’s circular. It presents as a {{t|paradox}}, because of that {{tag|slash}}. Now the slash is not a part of idiomatic punctuation in the English language. It’s a decoration with no fixed grammatical meaning. To use a [[slash]] in legal writing is to confess that the ordinary, punctuated words of the English language have defeated you. | ||
In “[[and/or]]”, that slash means — can ''only'' mean — “''{{f|or}}''”. So by saying “{{f|and/or}}” you are really saying “and, ''or'' or”. But to be hermetically sealed and consistent, shouldn’t you make one further clarifying step, and say “{{f|and}}, {{f|and/or}} {{f|or}}”? | |||
AND DO YOU NOW SEE THE INFINITE REGRESSION YOU HAVE SET IN MOTION? | AND DO YOU NOW SEE THE INFINITE REGRESSION YOU HAVE SET IN MOTION? | ||
Go back to your draft and strike all examples, and we shall never speak of this again. | Go back to your draft and strike all examples, and we shall never speak of this again. | ||
{{seealso}} | {{seealso}} | ||
*{{tag|profound ontological uncertainty}} | *{{tag|profound ontological uncertainty}} | ||
{{plainenglish}} | {{plainenglish}} | ||
{{c3|conjunction|Plain English|ISIA}} | {{c3|conjunction|Plain English|ISIA}} |