0
Anonymous Posted 10 years ago
Grammar

Me neither

Hi. Is it possible to say "them neither/ you neuther/ us neither/ her neither/ him neither/ it neither" on the analogy with "me neither" ?
  

Top answer

"Me neither" is used to indicate your agreement with a negative opinion. It is conversational and very informal. Jane: I don't like tomato ice cream.

  • "Me neither" is used to indicate your agreement with a negative opinion.
  • It is conversational and very informal.
  • Jane: I don't like tomato ice cream.
  • Me: Me neither, yuk!
  • You cannot answer for another person or persons, only for yourself.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

1 Answers
0
"Me neither" is used to indicate your agreement with a negative opinion. It is conversational and very informal.

Jane: I don't like tomato ice cream.
Me: Me neither, yuk!

You cannot answer for another person or persons, only for yourself.

Jane: I don't like tomato ice cream.
Me: My brother doesn't either. He doesn't like anything with tomato in it.

Related Questions