Neither Bert, nor Holly is going to the party is the correct form.
No, the sentence should be "Neither Bert nor Holly is going to the party" to show correct subject-verb agreement. "Is" should be used instead of "are" because "neither" is a singular subject, so the verb should also be singular.
No, the sentence is incorrect. It should be "Neither Holly nor her sisters are going to the party" to ensure subject-verb agreement.
Not on its own. But it is called a "correlative conjunction" when it is paired with the conjunction "nor" that is located separately in the sentence. Neither can otherwise be an adjective or pronoun.
Agreement is a concept related to grammar and language structure, and is neither active nor passive voice. In grammar, active voice is when the subject of a sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject receives the action of the verb. Agreement refers to the relationship between different parts of a sentence, such as subject-verb agreement or pronoun-antecedent agreement.
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No, the correct sentence is: "Neither he nor you is going to the party." In this case, "is" should be used because neither "he" nor "you" is singular.
No, the sentence is incorrect. It should be "Neither Holly nor her sisters are going to the party" to ensure subject-verb agreement.
Not on its own. But it is called a "correlative conjunction" when it is paired with the conjunction "nor" that is located separately in the sentence. Neither can otherwise be an adjective or pronoun.
The English sentence "Neither Kyle not his brother are interested in bask" does indeed show the correct subject-verb agreement. For further advice on grammatical matters, try the "Grammarly" website.
Agreement is a concept related to grammar and language structure, and is neither active nor passive voice. In grammar, active voice is when the subject of a sentence performs the action, while passive voice is when the subject receives the action of the verb. Agreement refers to the relationship between different parts of a sentence, such as subject-verb agreement or pronoun-antecedent agreement.
Neither Marques nor Leland needs his bike repaired.
Neither Patrick nor Jamal remembered to bring hishomework.
a
Neither one is good, but the second is definitely not proper grammar.
falaffles
It is neither, it is simply grammatically poor and makes little sense.
"Neither is Grandma" is a sentence because it includes a subject and a verb pertaining to the subject (the subject does it). "Neither is Grandma" can be rewritten as "Grandma is neither", which is more obviously a sentence, though we would not normally say it that way.
Neither of the books you are looking for are available