Instead of 'or' and together with 'neither' in a negative statement, when none of the alternatives are true:
"Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds" (Semi-official creed for the US postal service)
"both A and B" - A and B
"either A or B" - A or B (or both)
"neither A nor B" - not A and not B
I am not happy nor am I unhappy.
I applied for a job this summer.
An example of using nor in a sentence would be: " They had neither fish nor cheese at the party." It usually has to be paired with neither to work properly in a sentence. Nor goes with neither. Or goes with either. The color, gray, is neither black nor white. I prefer either gray or black for lettering.
Neither you nor your brother have offended me.
"I applied to Cambridge University in Massachusetts."
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.
That is not a full sentence nor do you know who "she" is.
It should be: I applied for duty yesterday.Had and on are not necessary.
You and your friend applied at....
Yes.
pro-slavery doesn't have just one sentence, nor can it own a sentence.
I don't like neither apple nor orange.