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Liveinjapan Posted 17 years ago
Grammar

Too /either

"It doesn't make sense to me."

"it doesn't to me, too."

"It doesn't to me, either."

In this case, 'either' cannot be used, right?

Fist off, is my example correct?

Thanks.
  

Top answer

On the contrary, if you want to agree with a negative statement, you use "either". If you agree with a positive statement you use "too".

  • On the contrary, if you want to agree with a negative statement, you use "either".
  • If you agree with a positive statement you use "too".
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3 Answers
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On the contrary, if you want to agree with a negative statement, you use "either". If you agree with a positive statement you use "too".
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Thanks, Olgaa.

I know this rule.

But I thought it might sound strange to say either and thus I want to comfirm how it sounds to natives.
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I should've written like that:

There are three people. One is a student and the other two are teachers and they are having a conversation.

The student said "Does my sentence make sense" or "Does it sound natural to you" or thing like that.
The teacher Tom replied first "it doesn't make sense to me."
The teacher Bob also replied to the student "it

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