Ah.Estav wrote: ↑Sat Feb 12, 2022 7:39 pm The construction "[number] or so" means "about [number]", could be more or could be less by any plausible amount. In the case of "five", you'd expect someone to usually be able to give a certain amount for smaller numbers, so it's most likely that the number is in the range of five-six than the range of four-five, but it doesn't denote a specific set-in-stone range. It depends on the context. The reason why someone would say "five or so" instead of just "five" also depends on the context: it might be that someone is estimating the amount of something they only got a glance of (too fast to count), or trying to remember how many times something occurred and is not sure if they missed one (or more) times.
("five or six" there had an unstressed "or", [ɹ̩], as opposed to a stressed one, [oɹ]. "five or six" for me is "about five to six", "five ór six" is five, or six, (or both sometimes) but nothing else.)