yes....Neither I nor him, knew she was capable of such
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.
It is neither nor and either or. So, in a sentence, "he is neither funny, nor smart"
Correlative conjunction "neither...nor" is used in the sentence provided.
Not on its own. But it is called a "correlative conjunction" when it is paired with the conjunction "nor" that is located separately in the sentence. Neither can otherwise be an adjective or pronoun.
I did not lie, nor would I ever lie.I was neither for nor against the candidate.I could neither ignore her insult nor forgive her.
I don't like neither apple nor orange.
I am neither an extrovert, nor an introvert, I am an ambivert.
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.
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 phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
Neither you nor your brother have offended me.
Neither Mike nor John wanted to clean up after their roommate Chris.
It is neither nor and either or. So, in a sentence, "he is neither funny, nor smart"
I neither like carrots nor peas.
I think it should be Neither Don nor are you playing hooky?
Neither my mother nor my father came to the school to collect me. Its called a compound sentence with a compound subject
Correlative conjunction "neither...nor" is used in the sentence provided.