Yeah.
The correct phrase is "neither was" when referring to a singular subject, and "neither were" when referring to a plural subject. For example, you would say "Neither of the options was appealing" for a singular subject and "Neither of the teams were ready" for a plural subject. It depends on what follows "neither."
"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.
There are two syllables in the word neither. (Nei-ther)
In French, "Monday" is a masculine word: "le lundi."
"Oba" is neither a suffix nor a prefix. It is a standalone word in Japanese that means "aunt" in English.
It is neither.
1. old is not a subject it is an adjecive 2. you need a sentantance to have a compound subject 3. subject is always a noun 4. for it to be a compound subject you need a word like and, or, neither etc. 5. you need 2 nouns as a subject with one of the words mentioned in #4 between them
No, the word 'neither' isn't a verb so doesn't have any tenses. Only verbs have tenses.
In your sentence "Neither Mercury nor Pluto are as large as Earth," the word, Neither, is the subject. In classical English it would read, "Neither Mercury nor Pluto is as large as Earth." However American English prefers smooth flow and tends to ignore the rules of classical grammar. It tends to have the verb take the form of the noun or nouns immediately preceding the verb. Thus, while in Classical English, the verb would be is since the subject is Neither, American English is likely to use the verb are since it immediately follows Mercury and Pluto.
neither tom or Jim went to the park.
The indefinite pronoun 'neither' does not have a possessive form.
The word "password" is neither masculine or feminine. The word refers to a code or phrase combination that neither has a female or male connotation.