neither one has
No, the correct phrasing would be "Neither the teacher nor the students seem to understand the rules of the game" because "neither" is a negative term that indicates more than one person is involved.
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.
Neither. The correct spelling is surprise.
Neither of those are words, but if they were - one 'c' at the beginning.
There are two correct forms, neither of which is exactly given in the question: "Oregon is a [not "the"] northwestern state" or "Oregon is one of the northwestern states."
"Neither do I" is correct.
At the risk of sounding waggish...and as long as we're talking about correct English usage...it's "neither IS wrong". (Substitute "neither" with "not one" and you have to use "is".) I would suggest that you use 'neither are correct' as 'not this one nor that one are correct' implies a plural. I can't understand why you would substitute 'neither' with 'not one'. daycartes
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.
Neither one is correct.
you use neither when none of them are correct and you use either when both can be correct. :) 2nd Answer: "Either" goes with "or", as in, "Either you or I will go". That means one or the other. "Neither" goes with "nor", as in, "Neither you nor I will go". That means that nobody will go.
Neither is correct. You would say "There are no students" or "There is not one student" or "There are not any students."
The correct is *me neither* .
Neither one is 'correct' they are both used in common parlance.
The correct phrase would be "Neither he nor I..."
Neither is correct. It should be "for me who enjoy math." Some will say "for me who enjoys math."
Neither is correct. It should be "will be based on"
No, the correct phrasing would be "Neither the teacher nor the students seem to understand the rules of the game" because "neither" is a negative term that indicates more than one person is involved.