each

  • 101each party — Every one of two or more parties. Appearing in a statute giving each party a designated number of peremptory challenges to a juror, the term, in a case involving plural parties, means each side, notwithstanding the parties on one side plead… …

    Ballentine's law dictionary

  • 102each other — pronoun to one another; one to the other; signifies that a verb applies to two or more entities both as subjects and as direct objects: , Maria and Robert loved each other. Syn: one another …

    Wiktionary

  • 103Each Way — A slang phrase used when a broker earns commissions from both parties in a security sale. The purchaser and the seller of the security will pay a fee to the broker for facilitating the transaction. Going each way on a trade is ideal for a broker …

    Investment dictionary

  • 104each way — UK term for betting on a horse to win and/or Place . An each way bet is when you have the same amount on the horse for a win and for a place. Bookmakers will give you one quarter of the win odds for a place in fields of eight or more and one… …

    Equestrian sports dictionary

  • 105each way single — Two bets. The first is for the selection to win; the second for it to be placed (each way) …

    Equestrian sports dictionary

  • 106each other, one another —    A few arbiters of usage continue to insist on each other for two things and one another for more than two. There is no harm in observing such a distinction, but little to be gained from it, and, as Fowler long ago noted, the practice has no… …

    Dictionary of troublesome word

  • 107each other, one another —    A few arbiters of usage continue to insist on each other for two things and one another for more than two. There is no harm in observing such a distinction, but little to be gained from it, and, as Fowler long ago noted, the practice has no… …

    Dictionary of troublesome word

  • 108each other — one another, each to the other …

    English contemporary dictionary

  • 109each to his own — See to each his own …

    English idioms

  • 110each and every — every (used for emphasis) I would like each and every one of you to bring your textbooks tomorrow …

    Idioms and examples