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Coincidence Posted 14 years ago
Grammar

Neither, any of

Hello,
I have a question about 'neither', none, either and any.
Are my sentences ok?
  1. We have been to two concerts. Neither of them was nice/ Neither was nice. (neither only for 2 things?; always 'was' not 'were'?)
  2. We haven't been to either of them (either for 2 things) / we haven't been to either.
  3. We have been to numerous concerts. None of them was nice (none for more than 2 things)/ None was nice.
  4. We have been to none of them/ to none.
What about 'any"? Do we say 'any of'?
5. We haven't been to any of these concerts (any for more than 2 things?)
6. Have you been to any of these concerts?

I would be grateful for your help.
Thank you in advance.
Kind regards.
  

Top answer

Everything there looks correct to me. You understand the usage very well. Rover

  • Everything there looks correct to me.
  • You understand the usage very well.
  • Rover
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3 Answers
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Everything there looks correct to me.

You understand the usage very well.

Rover
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Thank you very much for your help.
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I would say the following.

(Neither)(None) of them were nice. (as in "they were")
Neither one was nice. (as in "it was")

None of the apples (are)(were) edible.
None of the apple (is)(was) edible.

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