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.
Correlative conjunction "neither...nor" is used in the sentence provided.
The word "neither" as an adjective can start a sentence."Neither of the two cars finished the race.""Neither one trusted the other.""Neither snow nor rain nor heat nor gloom of night stays these couriers from the swift completion of their appointed rounds." (inscription on the James Farley Post Office in New York City, paraphrasing Herodotus)
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.
"Neither is Grandma" is a sentence because it includes a subject and a verb pertaining to the subject (the subject does it). "Neither is Grandma" can be rewritten as "Grandma is neither", which is more obviously a sentence, though we would not normally say it that way.
neither tom or Jim went to the park.
I don't like sushi, neither does my friend.
I neither like carrots nor peas.
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.
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
The correct phrasing is "neither one has," as "neither" is a singular pronoun and therefore takes a singular verb (has) in this sentence.
Neither you or I will be able to go.Our vacation will be neither Paris or Palm Beach, it will be right here in Passaic.
You can use "nor" to join two negative alternatives in a sentence. For example: "I neither eat meat nor fish." In this sentence, "nor" is used to show that the speaker does not eat either meat or fish.
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.
Yes, it can. "Neither ABC nor XYZ can/should/are/etc. ...".