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Poppyman Posted 15 years ago
Grammar

Neither.

Hello.

I know that if you don't like something, etc - you can say: "Me neither". But I'm not sure if I can say it to another person:

A. How do you think you're going to live? You don't even work.

B. You neither.

Is that correct? Or should it be "either?"

Thanks.
  

Top answer

B should be: Neither do you.

  • B should be: Neither do you.
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10 Answers
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B should be: Neither do you.
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Thank you. And can't "neither" be at all?
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I don't understand your question?
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Can't we use "neither" there at all? Like "me neither" but only with "you" (you neither).
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I'm sorry, i'm having difficulties understanding your question. Hope someone else could help us here?
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Hi,

I know that if you don't like something, etc - you can say: "Me neither". But I'm not sure if I can say it to another person:

A. How do you think you're going to live? You don't even work.

B. You neither.

Is that correct? Yes. It's casual, spoken English.

Or should it be "either?"
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Thank you very much for answering, Clive, but I heard that we can say "you either" here: http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20080318011359AAu49JX

Sorry for interrupting you.
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I wouldn't say "You, either."

You don't either

Neither do you.
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Hi,

I can't remember hearing 'You, either'. Sounds a bit odd to me.

Clive

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