on the one hand
On the one hand, the plan is efficient, but on the other hand, it is very expensive.
AdverbUsed to introduce the first of two contrasting points, arguments, or considerations. It signals that another, often opposing, point will follow, typically introduced by "on the other hand."
This phrase is used to structure a balanced discussion by presenting one side of an argument or situation before presenting the contrasting side. It is almost always paired with "on the other hand."
- On the one hand, the job offers a high salary and excellent benefits.
- On the one hand, I want to go to the party, but on the other hand, I have an early meeting tomorrow.
- The proposal is attractive: on the one hand, it would save us money; on the other hand, it would require significant staff time.
- While typically used in a pair, "on the one hand" can sometimes be used alone in informal speech when the contrasting point is strongly implied by the context.
- "On the one hand, I feel like I should help..." (The listener understands an unstated "but" is coming.)
- On the other hand: The contrasting phrase used to introduce the second point.
- Conversely: A more formal adverb used to introduce an opposite idea.
- However / Nevertheless / Yet: Transition words used to introduce a contrasting statement, but they do not explicitly pair with another introductory phrase like "on the one hand" does.
- From one perspective
- Firstly (in a contrasting sense)
- For one thing
This phrase functions as a discourse marker or conjunctive adverb. Its primary purpose is not to convey a standalone meaning but to organize information and signal a specific rhetorical structure—the presentation of a dual or balanced perspective.
On the one hand, the plan is efficient, but on the other hand, it is very expensive.
- from one point of view
- on the one hand, she is a gifted chemist