III. BĂ i táşp thá»±c hĂ nh vá»›i NEITHER vĂ EITHER BĂ i 1. Viáşżt lại các câu sau vá»›i nghÄ©a tương đương dĂąng NEITHER… NOR hoáş·c EITHER …OR. 1.Linda hasn’t got a laptop. Joe hasn’t got one, either. (Neither) —> 2.She doesn’t like hip hop or heavy mental music. (Neither) —> 3.We could have lunch at home. We could
In formal occasions, you might want to say “Either is fine.”. Take note that in situations where choices are posed, you aren’t limited to questions that have “Which” and answers with “either,” “or,” “neither,” and “nor.”. Grammatically, these are also correct questions and answers but do not require these words:Neither of the studies have been reviewed. Check answer. “Neither,” which means “not either,” negates each of two possibilities individually. In formal writing, treat it as singular (“neither is”). In informal usage, it may take either a singular or a plural verb (“neither is/are”).
"nor I." the problem isn't either/neither since the meaning is clearly negative "neither" sounds better because "me" ends in a vowel. either way. but objective case is wrong. except, in colloquialism grammar gets ignored. so if i person says "me neither" that projects one kind of persona. if he or she correctly says "nor I,' that is another
The pairs eitheror and neithernor are correlative conjunctions. They connect words, phrases, or clauses that are grammatically similar. TIMESTAMPS00:CmCtC.