I don't like sushi, neither does my friend.
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 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.
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
Neither Mike nor John wanted to clean up after their roommate Chris.
Neither the mom nor the daughter wanted to drive down to Arizona for softball Nationals.
no. if a sentence was going to end with "neither" it has to be changed to "either" however it can be used as if for example someone is a writer and someone is asking them about the words they put in the story. they could say " did you use the word neither" in that case i think the correct answer to your question is yes. a sentence can end in the word neither
Neither of the black boxes were recovered after the plane crash. Neither he nor his brother had ever been out of the country before.
How would you use theory in a sentence
Neither of those are correct. Correct variations would be: "did not receive" "has not received" "had not received" Which you use will depend on the overall sentence you are trying to create.
The word neither is used in a sentence when describing two parties when both are rejected, usually in conjunction with the word 'nor'. An example would be:"For dinner, I chose neither the Pad Thai nor the Pickled Monkey Brains."
The correct one is either: You will never go either. To use neither, there must be an alternate: You will never go and neither will I.
I would use it correctly in a sentence, of course. Thank you for asking.