Why is the word, ‘neither’ not used in the given sentence?

The titular Queen is the titular girl, but she has neither authority nor privileges.

Asked on March 3, 2021 in Other.
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2 Answer(s)

What is some proof that you are wrong?

She is the titular queen; and as per

quote in her book, cannot it be the supreme monarch?

Does neither the authority nor the honour ever mean that the verb has to be objects of it.

She is the titular queen but

she does not have the authority nor does she enjoy the honour of a queen.

Note that unless you were referring to a specific queen, you would not use an “I” or “D” symbol.

https://dictionary.cambridge.edu/?q=none. There

are 16 tags in org/grammar/british-grammar/questions and negative sentences. See also https://english.stackexchange.org/neither-neither-nor-and-not-either Which

is the correct way to use neither and nor in a sentence?

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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Is there another way to correctly phrasing this, which has not been mentioned?

She is the titular queen but neither does she have the authority of nor does she enjoy the honour of a queen.

What is your opinion on “The End Of The Universe”?

Answered on March 3, 2021.
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