to share your thoughts and feelings more openly, open up, To quickly stop feeling a negative emotion, snap out of, to have very serious problems that limit the ways in which you can act, back against the wall, _____ allows us to make a negative statement about two people or things at the same time. _____ goes before singular countable nouns. , Neither allows us to make a negative statement about two people or things at the same time. Neither goes before singular countable nouns. We use it to say ‘not either’ in relation to two things. Neither can be pronounced /ˈnaɪðə(r)/ or /ˈni:ðə(r)/., ____ parent came to meet the teacher. (The mother didn’t come and the father didn’t come.), Neither parent came to meet the teacher. , In formal styles, we use neither of with a ____ verb when it is the subject., In formal styles, we use neither of with a singular verb when it is the subject., In informal speaking, people often use neither with ____ verbs., In informal speaking, people often use neither with plural verbs., It connects two or more negative alternatives. This can sound formal in speaking.,  neiter...nor, I hate snakes. I can’t even look at a picture of a snake. ______ can I?, Neither can I?, "I've never been to the States." "I haven't _____.", "I've never been to the States." "I haven't either.", We can use ____ as a determiner before a noun to talk about two choices or possibilities. The noun that follows ___ must be a singular countable noun., We can use either as a determiner before a noun to talk about two choices or possibilities. The noun that follows either must be a singular countable noun., Either must be followed by ____ if we use it before the, these, those or possessives (my, your) with a plural noun, Either must be followed by "of" if we use it before the, these, those or possessives (my, your) with a plural noun, Either we go by train ____ we rent a car. Which do you prefer?, Either we go by train or we rent a car. Which do you prefer?, We use neither ____ before pronouns and plural countable nouns which have a determiner (my, his, the) before them., We use neither of before pronouns and plural countable nouns which have a determiner (my, his, the) before them.

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