[
UK
/bˈəʊθ/
]
[ US /ˈboʊθ/ ]
[ US /ˈboʊθ/ ]
ADJECTIVE
-
(used with count nouns) two considered together; the two
both girls are pretty
How To Use both In A Sentence
- It's not bad but neither is it brilliant - which won't bother 99 per cent of buyers one jot as they are in it for the image.
- Druses were common throughout the mesophyll tissues, and peltate, glandular trichomes were present on both epidermises.
- Fertilization therefore results in an egg carrying a nucleus with contributions from both parents, and it was concluded that the cell nucleus must contain the physical basis of heredity.
- It bothered me a little that I didn't have a pickup, and I couldn't see doing much off road driving with my Mustang fastback.
- I really felt like both of us were gonna be excited for the other one if we won and that meant a lot.
- A third goal at that stage would have saved Rangers a lot of bother.
- Both groups are forced to suffer the prejudices that have been fuelled by the tabloids and absorbed by an uninformed public.
- Though the change was slight, he saw that they had both lost a little of their babyishness.
- English is called a nominative-accusative language because both transitive and intransitive verbs take subjects. Behind Bars | ATTACKERMAN
- Part of the problem in making extrapolations from these patterns to build a theory is that the relationship between language and social structure may vary considerably, both synchronically and diachronically.