Some people mispronounced it as “Neither them nor us”. “Neither they nor we” by dictionary. “Neither them nor us”
Which is the really most correct one? “Neither them nor us went to the show” or “Neither them nor we went to the show. ”
I think the second because Neither is the subject and so it should be in the nominative.
“Neither they nor we
went to the show. I don’t want to spoil it (wom merz’s answer on the other end of the question)”, says the correct answer. ” (Neither modifies the subjects; if the subjects were not named it would stand in for the subjects and in your case, the subjects are named, and neither/nor both require subjects, thus cannot be the subjects of the verb went). They
and we are compound subjects of the sentence, therefore are in the nominative case; they and we are doing the action of the verb.
Our effect is an accusative case – recipients of the action of the verb, or objects of a preposition. They hit
us. This is the accusative case. (direct object of the verb) The agreement was between them and us. (objects of the preposition ‘between’)
The Nominative (or subjective) is the form noun in the dictionary. I (accusative: me), we (accusative: us), he (accusative: him), she (accusative: her), they (accusative: them) and who (accusative: whom).
How do you pronounce “Neither” and “Now neither”. No further negatives are warranted. I don’t want bacon or eggs. I want to eat something I should have. ” I want neither bacon nor eggs, now what do I need to know? What is a negative “nor”?
I’m not going to play the game. I’m not going anywhere. Why do I have to put on an Xbox? “Neither am I.” Am
I trying to remove or remove the word “nor” from the language? What is your mind game?
What do you think about the latest X for the best?
Why does “neither/nor” work and why is it more appropriate to use “neither/or” and ‘not either/nor’? When talking about it, it refers to “they” or “them” in terms of contextuality, as in subject versus object. What’s worth noting, too, is when we use these terms in a sentence containing an elliptical clause.
“Neither they nor we
went to the show. I don’t want to spoil it (wom merz’s answer on the other end of the question)”, says the correct answer. ” (Neither modifies the subjects; if the subjects were not named it would stand in for the subjects and in your case, the subjects are named, and neither/nor both require subjects, thus cannot be the subjects of the verb went). They
and we are compound subjects of the sentence, therefore are in the nominative case; they and we are doing the action of the verb.
Our effect is an accusative case – recipients of the action of the verb, or objects of a preposition. They hit
us. This is the accusative case. (direct object of the verb) The agreement was between them and us. (objects of the preposition ‘between’)
The Nominative (or subjective) is the form noun in the dictionary. I (accusative: me), we (accusative: us), he (accusative: him), she (accusative: her), they (accusative: them) and who (accusative: whom).
How do you pronounce “Neither” and “Now neither”. No further negatives are warranted. I don’t want bacon or eggs. I want to eat something I should have. ” I want neither bacon nor eggs, now what do I need to know? What is a negative “nor”?
I’m not going to play the game. I’m not going anywhere. Why do I have to put on an Xbox? “Neither am I.” Am
I trying to remove or remove the word “nor” from the language? What is your mind game?
What do you think about the latest X for the best?
Why does “neither/nor” work and why is it more appropriate to use “neither/or” and ‘not either/nor’? When talking about it, it refers to “they” or “them” in terms of contextuality, as in subject versus object. What’s worth noting, too, is when we use these terms in a sentence containing an elliptical clause.