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I was confronted with the following sentence

Pass either exam 480 or 483 along with exam 486.

and wonder, if the options for me are

  1. 480
  2. 483 and 486

or this:

  1. 480 and 486
  2. 483 and 486

Is this obvious to the native English reader? And if so, why? It is not obvious to some non-natives including myself.

2 Answers2

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It is ambiguous. It needs a comma to distinguish between:

“Pass either exam 480, or 483 along with exam 486”

= 480 or (483 +486)

and

“Pass either exam 480 or 483, along with exam 486”

= (480 or 483) + 486

The only argument for the one option is the lack of qualification of 483 by “exam”, favouring the second. But I regard that as weak at best, certainly not dispelling the ambiguity. The comma, I believe, does.

Additional observation

I find “along with” poor. “Together with” might be better, but “and” has exactly the same meaning and two fewer syllables. This is does not address the ambiguity, but, all things being equal, fewer words give greater clarity.

David
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  • It's certainly ambiguous but replacing 'along with' by 'and' does not resolve the ambiguity. To do that would require a comma in one of the same positions as when using 'along with'. – BoldBen Jun 13 '22 at 03:14
  • @BoldBen I did not write that "replacing 'along with' by 'and' resolves the ambiguity (which it certainly does not). I wrote that "It needs a comma to distinguish [the two]" i.e. to resolve the ambiguity. The remark about "along with" was a supplementary linguistic observation, as the P.S. implies. Of course, to quote a famous person, "the fewer words there are, the fewer words about which doubt may be entertained". The comma is more visible with fewer words after it. I have edited to clarify. Do you still have reservations about the answer? – David Jun 16 '22 at 16:59
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Sometimes I try to just try to insert a variable to see if it helps: "Either A or B and C" Does that make it anymore clear? It's still ambiguous to me and if you happen to pass the first one and neither of the last 2, I'd argue it. Lol. I think she means 1st or 2nd exam as well as the 3rd exam.

Jewelz
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