How to Use one way or another in a Sentence
one way or another
idiom-
When, one way or another, a lot of people watch the work, that’s the cherry on top.
— Mike Fleming Jr, Deadline, 3 Sep. 2024 -
Taylor Swift will find her way back to the apex one way or another.
— Andrew Unterberger, Billboard, 23 July 2024 -
This is my job — one way or another, to try to help my children.
— Lindsay Kimble, Peoplemag, 7 Feb. 2024 -
This is my job — one way or another, to try to help my children.
— Daniela Avila, Peoplemag, 6 Mar. 2024 -
Most people are going to have to face it one way or another.
— Vlada Gelman, TVLine, 27 June 2024 -
Look, Putin and his men may succeed in killing Navalny and Kara-Murza, one way or another.
— Jay Nordlinger, National Review, 16 Mar. 2023 -
The trade deadline still could be crucial for the Angels one way or another.
— Sarah Valenzuela, Los Angeles Times, 21 June 2023 -
College athletes have been paid in one way or another for a long time.
— Dan Wolken, USA TODAY, 31 Mar. 2023 -
The main story over the next few days is the lack of large-scale weather patterns that could steer the storm one way or another, said McNoldy.
— Doyle Rice, USA TODAY, 21 Nov. 2024 -
The trade-off is that indecision comes with a cost, one way or another.
— Martha C. White, wsj.com, 16 Oct. 2023 -
All of the answers will not be revealed until the season ends, one way or another.
— Chad Finn, BostonGlobe.com, 4 May 2023 -
These are things that so many of us have experienced in one way or another in our own life.
— Gary Baum, The Hollywood Reporter, 14 Feb. 2023 -
Conditions can change or the data may not show a clear trend one way or another.
— Hayleigh Evans, The Arizona Republic, 14 Oct. 2024 -
He has been entangled in the legal system in one way or another for most of his adult life.
— James Pindell, BostonGlobe.com, 4 Apr. 2023 -
People around us who are the same age as we are become impaired one way or another.
— Carolyn Rosenblatt, Forbes, 29 Mar. 2024 -
Every farmworker is in the same plight, in one way or another.
— Los Angeles Times, 9 Feb. 2023 -
But one way or another, the other parties in the coalition will have to find a way to work with Mr. Wilders’s Party for Freedom.
— Claire Moses, New York Times, 13 Mar. 2024 -
The season ends for both teams, Monday night in Sunrise, one way or another.
— Dave Hyde, Sun Sentinel, 22 June 2024 -
The new novel has, one way or another, taken Barry 25 years to write.
— John Self, Washington Post, 3 July 2024 -
But what’s clear from debuting at #1 is that a lot of people are eager to check it out, one way or another.
— Paul Tassi, Forbes, 23 Feb. 2024 -
But one way or another, the 29-year-old playwright seemed destined to shake things up in the nation’s capital.
— Thomas Floyd, Washington Post, 24 Oct. 2023 -
In one way or another, this was something that the other women on stage agreed upon.
— Sophia Scorziello, Variety, 7 June 2023 -
This applies in one way or another to every business in Texas.
— Dave Lieber, Dallas News, 12 June 2023 -
Those people are going to be looking for jobs one way or another.
— George Bradt, Forbes, 18 Apr. 2023 -
Trantalis predicts the stockade will end up opening its doors to the homeless one way or another.
— Susannah Bryan, Sun Sentinel, 27 June 2024 -
Musk seems determined to duke it out with Zuckerberg, one way or another.
— Tori Otten, The New Republic, 10 July 2023 -
As for East Palestine, this town of 5,000 people has always revolved, in one way or another, around these train tracks.
— Brad Mielke, ABC News, 14 Feb. 2023 -
But climate change is going to cost us dearly, one way or another.
— Anita Chabria, Los Angeles Times, 11 Jan. 2024 -
Trust that everything will work out, one way or another.
— Tarot.com, Baltimore Sun, 18 Jan. 2024 -
But one way or another, the United States is finally getting back into the Moon game.
— Eric Berger, Ars Technica, 3 Oct. 2023
Some of these examples are programmatically compiled from various online sources to illustrate current usage of the word 'one way or another.' Any opinions expressed in the examples do not represent those of Merriam-Webster or its editors. Send us feedback about these examples.
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