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قديم 26-06-2009, 10:30 PM
Essam ABDOU Essam ABDOU غير متواجد حالياً
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تاريخ التسجيل: May 2009
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افتراضي

Dear colleagues,

To sum up the above and give it the form of a rule:

According to Longman English Grammar by L. G. Alexander

After NEITHER, when the reference is plural, we can use a plural verb in everyday speech, or a singular verb when we want to sound "correct" or formal

What does that mean?

Grammatically speaking, it means that originally we use a singular verb after Neither.

When we say: "Neither Ali (SINGULAR) nor Omar (SINGULAR) is happy.", we mean not Ali or Omar, individually.

There's an expression that says: neither one thing nor the other

Best Regards!