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neither
[ nee-ther, nahy- ]
conjunction
- not either, as of persons or things specified (usually followed by nor ):
Neither John nor Betty is at home.
- nor; nor yet; no more:
Bob can't go, and neither can I. If she doesn't want it, neither do I.
adjective
- not either; not the one or the other:
Neither statement is true.
pronoun
- not either; not one person or the other; not one thing or the other:
Neither of the suggestions will do. Neither is to be trusted.
neither
/ 藞ni藧冒蓹; 藞na瑟冒蓹 /
determiner
- not one nor the other (of two); not either
neither foot is swollen
- ( as pronoun )
neither can win
conjunction
- coordinating
- used preceding alternatives joined by nor not
neither John nor Mary nor Joe went
- another word for nor
adverb
- not_standard.sentence modifier another word for either
Usage
Grammar Note
Pronunciation Note
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
亚洲网紅露点 History and Origins
Origin of neither1
Example Sentences
The late Richard Nixon shouldn't expect to come off well in these histories, but neither do John F. Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson, the latter of whom was especially susceptible to Gen. William Westmoreland鈥檚 persuasiveness.
What remains in short supply is the political will to ensure that these impacts are neither ignored nor repeated.
If last year's general election was all consuming and everywhere, this year's local elections, in truth, are neither.
Trump is already the only president to be impeached twice, and neither attempt led to a successful removal from the Oval Office.
Mr Wright said neither that chainsaw or the wedge of wood taken from the tree as a "trophy" had been found and had probably been "hidden away".
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