No, the word 'nor' is a conjunction (often preceded by 'neither), a word placed between two, or before the last of a group of more than two words.
Examples:
Neither you nor I will be able to go.
I couldn't contact Jim, Jane, nor Janet.
A pronoun is a word that takes the place of a noun in a sentence.
Example: I couldn't contact Jim, Jane, nor Janet. I'll try them again tomorrow. (the pronoun 'them' takes the place of the nouns 'Jim, Jane, Janet' in the second sentence)
"Nor" is a conjunction used to connect two negative clauses or choices. It is not a pronoun.
The correct pronoun is she, part of the compound subject; a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female.Unless, of course, it was a male that was trying to figure out the task with Robert.
"Weren't" is neither a noun nor a pronoun. It is a contraction of "were not," which is a negative form of the verb "to be."
No, "neither" is a negative determiner or pronoun used in combination with "nor" to express a negative choice between two options. It is not a correlative conjunction like "either...or" or "both...and."
"Has" is a verb in English. It is a form of the verb "to have" used in present tense to indicate possession or ownership.
Race is neither a pronoun nor a determiner. It is a noun that refers to a categorization of human beings based on physical characteristics such as skin color, facial features, and hair texture.
"Has" is a verb in English. It is a form of the verb "to have" used in present tense to indicate possession or ownership.
The correct pronoun is she, part of the compound subject; a personal pronoun that takes the place of a noun for a female.Unless, of course, it was a male that was trying to figure out the task with Robert.
A noun is a person, place, or thing, while a verb is an action word that describes what someone or something is doing.
"Neither" is not a preposition; it is commonly used as a pronoun, determiner, or conjunction. It is often used in negative constructions to refer to two alternatives.
No, "neither" is a negative determiner or pronoun used in combination with "nor" to express a negative choice between two options. It is not a correlative conjunction like "either...or" or "both...and."
Either mom or grandma will take her camera to the game tonight. The subject pronoun 'either' is an indefinite pronoun, which must be followed by two or more nouns (mom or grandma) or pronouns. The antecedent for the possessive 'her' is the singular pronoun 'either'.
Neither Patrick nor Jamal remembered to bring hishomework.
Not by itself, where it is either an adjective/determiner (neither boy) or a pronoun (neither is ready). However, it is paired with the conjunction NOR to form the correlative conjunction neither/nor.
It is neither. The word everything is a pronoun or a noun (e.g. he lost everything, as the object).
Either mom or grandma will take her camera to the game tonight. The subject pronoun 'either' is an indefinite pronoun, which must be followed by two or more nouns (mom or grandma) or pronouns. The antecedent for the possessive 'her' is the singular pronoun 'either'.
No. Change his to their and add s to report. The indefinite pronoun 'neither' is in agreement with with antecedents 'mayor' and 'members'.
The indefinite pronoun in the sentence is anyone.The indefinite pronoun has no antecedent in the sentence, it is a word for any person of those spoken to.Neither the group nor the individuals spoken to are specifically named.