• Whether

    Pronunciation

    • enPR: wÄ•'thÉ™(r), IPA: /ˈwɛðə(ɹ)/
    • enPR: hwÄ•'thÉ™(r), IPA: /ˈʍɛðə(ɹ)/
    • Rhymes: -ɛðə(ɹ)
    • Hyphenation: wheth + er
    • Homophones: weather, wether both in accents with the wine-whine merger

    Origin

    Old English hwæþer, from Proto-Germanic *hwaþeraz, comparative form of *hwaz ("who"). Cognate with German weder ("neither"), Swedish hvar, Icelandic hvorr ("each").

    Full definition of whether

    Pronoun

    whether

    1. (obsolete) Which of two. 11th-19th c.
      • 1526, William Tyndale, trans. Bible, Matthew XXVII:The debite answered and sayde unto them: whether of the twayne will ye that I lett loosse unto you?
      • Bible, Matthew xxi. 31Whether of them twain did the will of his father?

    Conjunction

    1. (obsolete) Introducing a direct interrogative question (often with correlative or) which indicates doubt between alternatives.
      • 1526, William Tyndale, trans. Bible, Mark II:whether ys it easyer to saye to the sicke of the palsey, thy synnes ar forgeven the: or to saye, aryse, take uppe thy beed and walke?
      • 1616, William Shakespeare, King John, I.i:Whether hadst thou rather be a Faulconbridge, ... Or the reputed sonne of Cordelion?
    2. Used to introduce an indirect interrogative question that consists of multiple alternative possibilities (usually with correlative or).
      • 2012, June 19, Phil McNulty, England 1-0 Ukraine, The incident immediately revived the debate about goal-line technology, with a final decision on whether it is introduced expected to be taken in Zurich on 5 July.
      • 2013-07-20, Old soldiers?, Whether modern, industrial man is less or more warlike than his hunter-gatherer ancestors is impossible to determine. The machine gun is so much more lethal than the bow and arrow that comparisons are meaningless. One thing that is true, though, is that murder rates have fallen over the centuries, as policing has spread and the routine carrying of weapons has diminished.
    3. He chose the correct answer, but whether by luck or by skill I don't know.
    4. Without a correlative, used to introduce a simple indirect question; if, whether or not.
      Do you know whether he's coming?
    5. Used to introduce a disjunctive adverbial clause which qualifies the main clause of the sentence (with correlative or).
      He's coming, whether you like it or not.

    Usage notes

    There is some overlap in usage between senses 2 and 3, in that a yes-or-no interrogative content clause can list the two possibilities explicitly in a number of ways:

    Do you know whether he's coming or staying?

    Do you know whether he's coming or not?

    Do you know whether or not he's coming?

    Further, in the first two of these examples, the "or staying" and "or not" may be added as an afterthought (sometimes indicated in writing with a comma before), such that the whether may be uttered in sense 3 and then amended to sense 2.

    Sense 4 does not have a counterpart that introduces only a single possibility; *"He's coming, whether you like it" is ungrammatical.

    In traditional grammar, the clauses headed by whether in senses 2 and 3 are classified as noun clauses, and those headed by whether in sense 4 are classified as adverb clauses.

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