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No, it should be "neither he nor you expect to attend the meeting"."Neither he nor you" is a compound subject, so you need to use the subjective form of the pronouns. "Him" is the objective form, so it is not correct here. One way to test this is to simplify the sentence by using a simple subject instead of a compound subject: It is easier to see that you would say "he expects to attend" and not "him expects to attend".There is another aspect of this example that can be confusing: "he" and "you" take different forms of the verb "expect": you would say "he expects to attend", but "you expect to attend". The rule in this case is to use the verb form that is correct for the subject closer to it. That is why it is correct to say "neither he nor you expect to attend the meeting" rather than "neither he nor you expects to attend the meeting".
Neither is correct. It should be "for me who enjoy math." Some will say "for me who enjoys math."
counting is a present participleBut the sentence is not correct it should be -- I am counting or I was counting.be + present participle is correct
Here is a sentence that contains the word coins. I don't imagine your teacher will be impressed by it, though. Perhaps you should consider doing your own homework instead.
100,106 (At one point, it should be noted, I came to 100,010 instead, but the first number should be correct.)
No, the sentence should be "Neither Bert nor Holly is going to the party" to show correct subject-verb agreement. "Is" should be used instead of "are" because "neither" is a singular subject, so the verb should also be singular.
No, the sentence is incorrect. It should be "Neither Holly nor her sisters are going to the party" to ensure subject-verb agreement.
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 sentence should be: Brian and I will be attending a seminar.
No, this is not a correct sentence. It should be guess instead or guest at the second word.
No, the correct sentence is "She called me when I was there." The pronoun "I" should always be capitalized in English, and "was" should be used instead of "i was".
It is NOT correct; it should be: He has neither had his breakfast nor IS HE coming out of his room (the inversion is used here for emphasis and effect).
No, that sentence is not grammatically correct. It should be "Is the checkout of a text correct?" or "Is the text checkout correct?" for proper structure.
The correct sentence is "This is the boys' mascot." This is because the subject "mascot" is singular, so it should be followed by "is" instead of "are."
NoThe sentence "You should of known better." derives from "You should've known better."; "should of" sounds about like "should've". Of course "should've" is a contraction for "should have" so the correct sentence is either "You should have known better." or (if speaking informally and using contractions) "You should've known better." Writing the sentence as "You should of known better." instead of "You should'veknown better." is INCORRECT.
No, the correct sentence would be "She was the most unlikely winner of the beauty contest." The word "was" should be used instead of "is", and "unlikeliest" should be changed to "unlikely" for proper grammar.
Neither Julius nor the tourists want to wait for the rain to end before visiting the museum. Subjects joined by “or” or “nor” - two or more subjects, joined by “or” or “nor” require a verb that agrees with the subject closest to the verb.