either neither

Status
Not open for further replies.

ridvann

Member
Joined
Dec 5, 2011
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Turkmen
Home Country
Turkmenistan
Current Location
Turkmenistan
Hello,

A: I don't like going into town at night.

B: Me either vs me neither.

A:
I've already lost my girl.
B:That wasn't my problem neither/ either.

I know we use 'either' in these case, but I have heard 'neither' used in the American movies. Please could you tell me the difference between them?

Thanks...
 
Hello,

A: I don't like going into town at night.

B: Me either vs me neither.
"Me neither" is correct.

A:
I've already lost my girl.
B:That wasn't my problem neither/ either. This exchange doesn't make sense whether you use "either" or "neither".

I know we use 'either' in these case, but I have heard 'neither' used in the American movies. Please could you tell me the difference between them?

Thanks...

Bhai.
 
Many learners would learn lots of English if they did one thing: read some American comic strips every day. American comic strips are full of idioms, contractions, and -- of course -- vocabulary. If you read a few American comic strips every day, your English will really improve.
I wouldn't recommend that if people want to learn standard English. Many comic strips use slang, deliberately non-standard language and word-play. I would rank comic strips with song lyrics as bad models for learners of English.
 
I think 'me either' and 'me neither' are used for only daily language in negative sentences.
 
'Me either' is not standard English. 'Me neither' is used as a response to negative statements.

A I don't smoke.
B: Me neither/Neither do I/Nor do I/I don't, either.

A: I want to give up smoking.
B: Me too/So do I/I do, too.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top