Neither Julius nor the tourists want to wait for the rain to end before visiting the museum.
Subjects joined by “or” or “nor” - two or more subjects, joined by “or” or “nor” require a verb that agrees with the subject closest to the verb.
No, this sentence is not correct by nature. Instead of wants after tourists, it should be wanted.
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
yes, it looks good to me.
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.
Technically neither one is incorrect. It is more grammatically correct to use this sentence; He felt he was being mistreated.
blames, himself
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
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.
The correct phrasing is "neither one has," as "neither" is a singular pronoun and therefore takes a singular verb (has) in this sentence.
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.
Yes, the sentence is correct. It conveys that the speaker expects to visit London from time to time in the future.
No it is a double negative
yes, it looks good to me.
Neither is correct. The correct phrase is 'goes shopping' (no for no to) He goes shopping on a Monday.
Neither friends and company or friends and events are correct sentences.
It is NOT correct; it should be: He has neither had his breakfast nor IS HE coming out of his room (the inversion is used here for emphasis and effect).
"Neither do I" is correct.
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