English citations of eaches

Noun, logistics edit

1995 1999 2003 2012 2014
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1995, Fitnesoft, Inc., “Suggestions for use/Food”, in Life Form User's Guide, Version 1.0 edition, Orem, Utah: Fewer Tiers, Inc., →ISBN, page 75:
    For foods that can be measured in eaches, such as cookies, fruits, chips, and candies, you can be fairly accurate by entering the number of items you consume. For example, if you had 2 bananas and 3 cookies for a snack, you can enter these values as eaches and get highly precise data from Life Form regarding their nutrition information.
  • 1995, Ronald Hughes, Zinc It!: Interfacing Third Party Libraries with Crossplatform GUI'S, John Gordon Burke Publisher, Inc., →ISBN, page 4-5:
    The client company sold pipe both in tons (wholesale) and eaches (retail).
  • 1999, William S. Paasche, Thomas D. Kerker, System and method for managing recurring orders in a computer network, US Patent 7353194 (PDF version), page 12:
    Alternatively, the quantities can be specified in bulk, cases or lots in addition to units, eaches or singles.
  • 1999, William S. Paasche, Thomas D. Kerker, System and method for managing recurring orders in a computer network, US Patent 7353194 (PDF version), page 12:
    As will be discussed below, products or services are typically available in a particular unit quantity, such as a twelve ounce bottle, also known as “eaches” or “units” where bulk quantities are referred to as “cases” or “lots”.
  • 1999, William S. Paasche, Thomas D. Kerker, System and method for managing recurring orders in a computer network, US Patent 7359871 (PDF version), page 50:
    An Independent Business Owner can place standing and recurring orders for products in both “eaches” and cases. As used herein, “eaches” refers to purchasing products in single quantities rather than case quantities.
  • 2003, Marvin P. Rush, Burks Eric H., Implementing a fast-pick area at Defense Distribution Center San Joaquin (DDJC), Monterey, California: Naval Postgraduate School, →DOI, page 10:
    The number of restocks is based on the storage unit: If the sku is stored as a pallet then each pallet requires separate handling. If the sku is stored in smaller units, cases or eaches, then the number of restocks can be estimated by the fluid model.
  • 2012, Arthur V. Hill, “unit of measure”, in Barry Render, editor, The Encyclopedia of Operations Management, FT Press, →ISBN, page 373:
    For example, a firm might purchase an item in pallets, stock it in cases, and sell it in “eaches” (units).
  • 2014, James A. Cooke, Protean Supply Chains: Ten Dynamics of Supply and Demand Alignment, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., →ISBN, page 101:
    It should be noted that some retailers, especially those that started out as catalog merchants, do have experience in filling individual orders or eaches.

Noun, philosophy edit

1907 1909 1911 1948 1996
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1907, William James, Pragmatism, a new name for some old ways of thinking, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., page 264:
    You see how differently people take things. The world we live in exists diffused and distributed, in the form of an indefinitely numerous lot of eaches, coherint in all sorts of ways and degrees; and the tough-minded are perfectly willing to keep them at that valuation. They can stand that kind of world, their temper being well adapted to its insecurity. Not so the tender-minded party. They must back the world we find ourselves born into by ‘another and a better’ world in which the eaches form an All and the All a One that logically presupposes, co-implicates, and secures each each without exception.
  • 1909, William James, A pluralistic universe, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., page 202:
    If there be no outside witness, a thing can appear only to itself, the eaches or parts to their selves temporally, the all or whole to itself eternally. Different ‘selves’ thus break out inside of what the absolutist insists to be intrinsically one fact
  • 1911, William James, Some problems of philosophy, London: Longmans, Green, and Co., page 114:
    Does reality exist distributively? or collectively? mdash; in the shape of eaches, everys, anys, eithers? or only in the shape of an all or whole?
  • 1911, E. Z. Derr, The uncaused being and the criterion of truth, Boston: Sherman, French & Company, page 37:
    Not the various “Eaches” must be composed of matter or spirit, but not of both, for an “Each” is an ultimate reality, and, therefore, cannot be a compound or union of two different things, in other words, cannot have a cause at all.
  • 1948, William John MacLeod, Some interrelations between the psychology and philosophy of William James, Boston University, page 86:
    It is a monism which is a collection of units, of eaches, possessing All-forms and each-forms, God Himself being one of the eaches.
  • 1996, Samuel S. Hill, “Interpretation and Conclusion”, in One Name But Several Faces: Variety in Popular Christian Denominations in Southern History, Athens, Georgia: The University of Georgia Press, →ISBN, page 106:
    I have examined three prominent Protestant name groups in the American South: the Baptists, the “Christians,” and the “of God” bodies. Further, within each cluster I have considered several “eaches” that identify themselves by the cluster’s common name.