Word Usage – ‘Each’ Placement in a Sentence

adverb-placementword-usage

This article says 'each' usually appears in the normal middle position for adverbs when it is used to refer to the subject of a clause. dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/each

Here is an exmaple:

We would each say a poem or sing a song.

A grammar book gives another sentence where 'each' appears at the end:

These oranges cost 25 pence each.

In this usage, is there meaning difference between both possible positions where 'each' could appear? For example, between 'These oranges cost 25 pence each.' and 'These oranges each cost 25 pence.'

Best Answer

Good question. There are two things going on here:

Floating quantifiers

A few words expressing quantities—"both", "all", "each"—are flexible in that they can appear in different places without changing the meaning.

To elaborate on your example, the following are equivalent:

  • Each of us would say a poem or sing a song.
  • We each would say a poem or sing a song.
  • We would each say a poem or sing a song.

"All" and "both" are syntactically valid in all these locations as well.

Rate expressions

Another use of "each" is expressing a rate where the set of items quantified over is established in context. "Apiece" can also be used here. The following are equivalent:

  • These oranges cost 25 pence each/apiece.
  • The cost was 25 pence per orange.

Just like you could say We sang one song per person, you could say We sang a song each. But it would have to be We each graduated or Each of us graduated, not *We graduated each.

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