Short way of expressing alternatives





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A colleague recently pointed out that my usage of "resp." in English is incorrect, and is in fact an artefact of my native language. In Czech, it abbreviates "respektive" and is used to express




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.




more compactly as




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y], resp. X' when Y'.




Is there some correct English alternative, ideally just as short? Some examples:




  • To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.

  • We define f(x) as 1/x for x different from 0 and set f(x)=7 for x=0. --> We define f(x) as 1/x (resp. 7 for x=0).

  • For odd n we define a(n) as 10. For even n we define a(n) as 666. --> For odd (resp. even) n we define a(n) as 10 (resp. 666).










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  • " respectively" comes at the end in English.
    – Lambie
    Nov 19 at 18:16










  • It seems that the origin of the confusion was that in Czech the syntax is the same for both resp. and the literal 'translation' "respektive" of "respecitvely". But there is a different (also completely differently-sounding) word which is the actual translation of what "respectively" means. (Also, thanks for pointing out the "typo", let's pretend it never happened.)
    – Vojta Kovarik
    Nov 19 at 20:16












  • It’s not clear what you’re asking about, nor what your colleague meant. “resp" in English would normally mean “respectively” but how could that be related to “[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.” Sorry but your “To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.” Is simply wrong, on several levels. You seem to be asking about concepts hugely different in Czech and English
    – Robbie Goodwin
    Nov 19 at 21:00

















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












A colleague recently pointed out that my usage of "resp." in English is incorrect, and is in fact an artefact of my native language. In Czech, it abbreviates "respektive" and is used to express




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.




more compactly as




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y], resp. X' when Y'.




Is there some correct English alternative, ideally just as short? Some examples:




  • To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.

  • We define f(x) as 1/x for x different from 0 and set f(x)=7 for x=0. --> We define f(x) as 1/x (resp. 7 for x=0).

  • For odd n we define a(n) as 10. For even n we define a(n) as 666. --> For odd (resp. even) n we define a(n) as 10 (resp. 666).










share|improve this question









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Vojta Kovarik is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • " respectively" comes at the end in English.
    – Lambie
    Nov 19 at 18:16










  • It seems that the origin of the confusion was that in Czech the syntax is the same for both resp. and the literal 'translation' "respektive" of "respecitvely". But there is a different (also completely differently-sounding) word which is the actual translation of what "respectively" means. (Also, thanks for pointing out the "typo", let's pretend it never happened.)
    – Vojta Kovarik
    Nov 19 at 20:16












  • It’s not clear what you’re asking about, nor what your colleague meant. “resp" in English would normally mean “respectively” but how could that be related to “[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.” Sorry but your “To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.” Is simply wrong, on several levels. You seem to be asking about concepts hugely different in Czech and English
    – Robbie Goodwin
    Nov 19 at 21:00













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











A colleague recently pointed out that my usage of "resp." in English is incorrect, and is in fact an artefact of my native language. In Czech, it abbreviates "respektive" and is used to express




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.




more compactly as




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y], resp. X' when Y'.




Is there some correct English alternative, ideally just as short? Some examples:




  • To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.

  • We define f(x) as 1/x for x different from 0 and set f(x)=7 for x=0. --> We define f(x) as 1/x (resp. 7 for x=0).

  • For odd n we define a(n) as 10. For even n we define a(n) as 666. --> For odd (resp. even) n we define a(n) as 10 (resp. 666).










share|improve this question









New contributor




Vojta Kovarik is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











A colleague recently pointed out that my usage of "resp." in English is incorrect, and is in fact an artefact of my native language. In Czech, it abbreviates "respektive" and is used to express




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.




more compactly as




[Text claiming X, making assumption Y], resp. X' when Y'.




Is there some correct English alternative, ideally just as short? Some examples:




  • To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.

  • We define f(x) as 1/x for x different from 0 and set f(x)=7 for x=0. --> We define f(x) as 1/x (resp. 7 for x=0).

  • For odd n we define a(n) as 10. For even n we define a(n) as 666. --> For odd (resp. even) n we define a(n) as 10 (resp. 666).







synonyms abbreviations variants






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edited Nov 19 at 19:58





















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asked Nov 19 at 17:47









Vojta Kovarik

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Vojta Kovarik is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






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Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • " respectively" comes at the end in English.
    – Lambie
    Nov 19 at 18:16










  • It seems that the origin of the confusion was that in Czech the syntax is the same for both resp. and the literal 'translation' "respektive" of "respecitvely". But there is a different (also completely differently-sounding) word which is the actual translation of what "respectively" means. (Also, thanks for pointing out the "typo", let's pretend it never happened.)
    – Vojta Kovarik
    Nov 19 at 20:16












  • It’s not clear what you’re asking about, nor what your colleague meant. “resp" in English would normally mean “respectively” but how could that be related to “[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.” Sorry but your “To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.” Is simply wrong, on several levels. You seem to be asking about concepts hugely different in Czech and English
    – Robbie Goodwin
    Nov 19 at 21:00


















  • " respectively" comes at the end in English.
    – Lambie
    Nov 19 at 18:16










  • It seems that the origin of the confusion was that in Czech the syntax is the same for both resp. and the literal 'translation' "respektive" of "respecitvely". But there is a different (also completely differently-sounding) word which is the actual translation of what "respectively" means. (Also, thanks for pointing out the "typo", let's pretend it never happened.)
    – Vojta Kovarik
    Nov 19 at 20:16












  • It’s not clear what you’re asking about, nor what your colleague meant. “resp" in English would normally mean “respectively” but how could that be related to “[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.” Sorry but your “To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.” Is simply wrong, on several levels. You seem to be asking about concepts hugely different in Czech and English
    – Robbie Goodwin
    Nov 19 at 21:00
















" respectively" comes at the end in English.
– Lambie
Nov 19 at 18:16




" respectively" comes at the end in English.
– Lambie
Nov 19 at 18:16












It seems that the origin of the confusion was that in Czech the syntax is the same for both resp. and the literal 'translation' "respektive" of "respecitvely". But there is a different (also completely differently-sounding) word which is the actual translation of what "respectively" means. (Also, thanks for pointing out the "typo", let's pretend it never happened.)
– Vojta Kovarik
Nov 19 at 20:16






It seems that the origin of the confusion was that in Czech the syntax is the same for both resp. and the literal 'translation' "respektive" of "respecitvely". But there is a different (also completely differently-sounding) word which is the actual translation of what "respectively" means. (Also, thanks for pointing out the "typo", let's pretend it never happened.)
– Vojta Kovarik
Nov 19 at 20:16














It’s not clear what you’re asking about, nor what your colleague meant. “resp" in English would normally mean “respectively” but how could that be related to “[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.” Sorry but your “To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.” Is simply wrong, on several levels. You seem to be asking about concepts hugely different in Czech and English
– Robbie Goodwin
Nov 19 at 21:00




It’s not clear what you’re asking about, nor what your colleague meant. “resp" in English would normally mean “respectively” but how could that be related to “[Text claiming X, making assumption Y]. Unless it is the case that Y' --- then X' instead.” Sorry but your “To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.' . Unless you know she is married, then use 'Mrs.' instead. --> To address a woman in writing, use 'Ms.', resp. 'Mrs.' if you know she is married.” Is simply wrong, on several levels. You seem to be asking about concepts hugely different in Czech and English
– Robbie Goodwin
Nov 19 at 21:00










2 Answers
2






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-1
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accepted










I am having to re-answer that your first example is not correct since resp. is not applicable to an everyday English sentence as we shall see.



resp is listed as a maths abbreviation below but is not endorsed with a reference which in such a precise field as math leads to potential confusion. as I am not a mathmagician I have to accept this is a valid example from Wikipedia however the title Jargon says it all.



resp.

(Respectively) A convention to shorten parallel expositions. "A (resp. B) [has some relationship to] X (resp. Y)" means that A [has some relationship to] X and also that B [has (the same) relationship to] Y. For example, squares (resp. triangles) have 4 sides (resp. 3 sides); or compact (resp. Lindelöf) spaces are ones where every open cover has a finite (resp. countable) open subcover."



a better explanation is



resp. the word "respectively" and the symbol "resp." have different syntaxes. The latter should probably be used exclusively in a mathematical context. It's not a general-purpose abbreviation of the former...
http://www.numericana.com/answer/usage.htm#resp






share|improve this answer























  • The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 19 at 18:24










  • In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 19 at 18:26










  • @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
    – KJO
    Nov 19 at 18:29


















up vote
2
down vote













I think "or" works in all your examples:




To address a woman in writing, use "Ms"; or "Mrs" if you know she is married.




but I think I'd probably have turned it round, and put the default or usual case at the end:




To address a woman in writing, use "Mrs" if you know she is married, otherwise use "Ms".







share|improve this answer





















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    2 Answers
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    oldest

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    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes








    up vote
    -1
    down vote



    accepted










    I am having to re-answer that your first example is not correct since resp. is not applicable to an everyday English sentence as we shall see.



    resp is listed as a maths abbreviation below but is not endorsed with a reference which in such a precise field as math leads to potential confusion. as I am not a mathmagician I have to accept this is a valid example from Wikipedia however the title Jargon says it all.



    resp.

    (Respectively) A convention to shorten parallel expositions. "A (resp. B) [has some relationship to] X (resp. Y)" means that A [has some relationship to] X and also that B [has (the same) relationship to] Y. For example, squares (resp. triangles) have 4 sides (resp. 3 sides); or compact (resp. Lindelöf) spaces are ones where every open cover has a finite (resp. countable) open subcover."



    a better explanation is



    resp. the word "respectively" and the symbol "resp." have different syntaxes. The latter should probably be used exclusively in a mathematical context. It's not a general-purpose abbreviation of the former...
    http://www.numericana.com/answer/usage.htm#resp






    share|improve this answer























    • The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:24










    • In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:26










    • @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
      – KJO
      Nov 19 at 18:29















    up vote
    -1
    down vote



    accepted










    I am having to re-answer that your first example is not correct since resp. is not applicable to an everyday English sentence as we shall see.



    resp is listed as a maths abbreviation below but is not endorsed with a reference which in such a precise field as math leads to potential confusion. as I am not a mathmagician I have to accept this is a valid example from Wikipedia however the title Jargon says it all.



    resp.

    (Respectively) A convention to shorten parallel expositions. "A (resp. B) [has some relationship to] X (resp. Y)" means that A [has some relationship to] X and also that B [has (the same) relationship to] Y. For example, squares (resp. triangles) have 4 sides (resp. 3 sides); or compact (resp. Lindelöf) spaces are ones where every open cover has a finite (resp. countable) open subcover."



    a better explanation is



    resp. the word "respectively" and the symbol "resp." have different syntaxes. The latter should probably be used exclusively in a mathematical context. It's not a general-purpose abbreviation of the former...
    http://www.numericana.com/answer/usage.htm#resp






    share|improve this answer























    • The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:24










    • In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:26










    • @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
      – KJO
      Nov 19 at 18:29













    up vote
    -1
    down vote



    accepted







    up vote
    -1
    down vote



    accepted






    I am having to re-answer that your first example is not correct since resp. is not applicable to an everyday English sentence as we shall see.



    resp is listed as a maths abbreviation below but is not endorsed with a reference which in such a precise field as math leads to potential confusion. as I am not a mathmagician I have to accept this is a valid example from Wikipedia however the title Jargon says it all.



    resp.

    (Respectively) A convention to shorten parallel expositions. "A (resp. B) [has some relationship to] X (resp. Y)" means that A [has some relationship to] X and also that B [has (the same) relationship to] Y. For example, squares (resp. triangles) have 4 sides (resp. 3 sides); or compact (resp. Lindelöf) spaces are ones where every open cover has a finite (resp. countable) open subcover."



    a better explanation is



    resp. the word "respectively" and the symbol "resp." have different syntaxes. The latter should probably be used exclusively in a mathematical context. It's not a general-purpose abbreviation of the former...
    http://www.numericana.com/answer/usage.htm#resp






    share|improve this answer














    I am having to re-answer that your first example is not correct since resp. is not applicable to an everyday English sentence as we shall see.



    resp is listed as a maths abbreviation below but is not endorsed with a reference which in such a precise field as math leads to potential confusion. as I am not a mathmagician I have to accept this is a valid example from Wikipedia however the title Jargon says it all.



    resp.

    (Respectively) A convention to shorten parallel expositions. "A (resp. B) [has some relationship to] X (resp. Y)" means that A [has some relationship to] X and also that B [has (the same) relationship to] Y. For example, squares (resp. triangles) have 4 sides (resp. 3 sides); or compact (resp. Lindelöf) spaces are ones where every open cover has a finite (resp. countable) open subcover."



    a better explanation is



    resp. the word "respectively" and the symbol "resp." have different syntaxes. The latter should probably be used exclusively in a mathematical context. It's not a general-purpose abbreviation of the former...
    http://www.numericana.com/answer/usage.htm#resp







    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited Nov 19 at 20:10

























    answered Nov 19 at 18:14









    KJO

    1,201111




    1,201111












    • The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:24










    • In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:26










    • @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
      – KJO
      Nov 19 at 18:29


















    • The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:24










    • In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
      – Rosie F
      Nov 19 at 18:26










    • @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
      – KJO
      Nov 19 at 18:29
















    The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 19 at 18:24




    The OP's last example was correct. Your version of it makes no sense.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 19 at 18:24












    In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 19 at 18:26




    In English text, "e.g." means "for example". In the two texts where you've used "e.g.", it does not work, because your text following "e.g." cannot be inferred from the text before it.
    – Rosie F
    Nov 19 at 18:26












    @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
    – KJO
    Nov 19 at 18:29




    @RosieF agreed I was in process of edits so there are no longer e.g.
    – KJO
    Nov 19 at 18:29












    up vote
    2
    down vote













    I think "or" works in all your examples:




    To address a woman in writing, use "Ms"; or "Mrs" if you know she is married.




    but I think I'd probably have turned it round, and put the default or usual case at the end:




    To address a woman in writing, use "Mrs" if you know she is married, otherwise use "Ms".







    share|improve this answer

























      up vote
      2
      down vote













      I think "or" works in all your examples:




      To address a woman in writing, use "Ms"; or "Mrs" if you know she is married.




      but I think I'd probably have turned it round, and put the default or usual case at the end:




      To address a woman in writing, use "Mrs" if you know she is married, otherwise use "Ms".







      share|improve this answer























        up vote
        2
        down vote










        up vote
        2
        down vote









        I think "or" works in all your examples:




        To address a woman in writing, use "Ms"; or "Mrs" if you know she is married.




        but I think I'd probably have turned it round, and put the default or usual case at the end:




        To address a woman in writing, use "Mrs" if you know she is married, otherwise use "Ms".







        share|improve this answer












        I think "or" works in all your examples:




        To address a woman in writing, use "Ms"; or "Mrs" if you know she is married.




        but I think I'd probably have turned it round, and put the default or usual case at the end:




        To address a woman in writing, use "Mrs" if you know she is married, otherwise use "Ms".








        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 19 at 18:02









        Thruston

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