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"due either to" is a grammatically correct and commonly used phrase in written English.
It is typically used to introduce a cause or reason for something. For example: - The delay in the project was due either to insufficient funding or a shortage of materials. - Jane's absence from the meeting was due either to a family emergency or an unexpected illness. - The decline in sales can be attributed to numerous factors, due either to changes in consumer behavior or increased competition.
Exact(60)
But that was due either to drinking bouts or, at least once, an undisclosed heart attack.
Their movement must have been due either to constraint or to their nature.
Any new smallpox outbreak would be due either to a lab accident or to a bioterror attack.
Increased variability is due either to structural stiffness features or damage.
This loss is due either to a specific proteolysis or to a mechanical cleavage.
She must also pay state taxes on her award, which will be due either to New York, where Ms. Browne Sanders worked, or New Jersey, where she lives.
This is due either to too much or too little watering, too much or too little calcium, or too much or too little anything else.
Today, Bonds's No. 73 is believed to be worth about $1 million -- the drop in price due either to the sagging economy or the new home run record.
This polarization can be due either to electron beams and their associated return currents or to electron and proton beams.
Schwartz, Malenka and their associates looked at lab mice enduring chronic paw pain due either to persistent inflammation or to nerve damage.
We use primarily electrophysiogy and high-resolution array tomographic imaging to dissect the function of synapses undergoing changes due either to external stimuli, disease states or internal modulation.
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Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com