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Wendy
I've made two sentences which are "I'm not big on western cuisine. I'm not big on parties." Chat GPT combined these two sentences to: "I'm not big on western cuisine and parties, respectively." I think, since the only subject in this sentence is "I", so it's unnecessary to add "respectively" to clarify the meaning of the sentence, am I right?
Thank you in advance for your answer.
Mar 13, 2025 1:25 PM
Answers · 5
2
The 'respectively' is a weird addition. I'm not even sure what it means or why it's there.
I'm not big on western cuisine AND parties = these two things in combination. Maybe you are declining an invitation to a party where western cuisine will be served.
I'm not big on western cuisine OR parties = these two things separately. I don't like western cuisine. I don't also don't like parties.
March 13, 2025
1
Hi Wendy,
You're absolutely right! "Respectively" is unnecessary in that sentence because there's no ambiguity—the subject ("I") applies to both dislikes equally.
The best way to combine your sentences naturally would be: "I'm not big on Western cuisine or parties." or "I'm not really into Western cuisine or parties."
"Respectively" is usually used when matching two separate subjects to two separate objects, like: "John and Sarah are not big on Western cuisine and parties, respectively." (This means John dislikes cuisine, and Sarah dislikes parties.)
Since your original sentence only has one subject ("I"), there's no need for "respectively." 👍😊
March 14, 2025
That answer makes no sense.
I’m not big on either western cuisine or parties.
March 13, 2025
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Wendy
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English
Learning Language
English
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