BOTH refers to two people or things. It is the opposite of, neither, none, BOTH takes , a singular verb, a plural verb, ALL takes a plural verb and its opposite is, neither, none, EITHER OF/NEITHER OF/NONE OF/ EACH OF + Plural Noun/Pronoun is followed by, a singular verb, a plural verb, a singular or plural verb, a singular (formal) or plural (informal) verb , NONE OF + uncountable noun is followed by, a singular verb, a plural verb, EITHER ... OR... / NEITHER ... NOR ... are followed by a singular or plural noun depending on the number of, the first noun, the second noun, Either the teachers or the principal __ to blame for the accident., is, are, is/are, EACH vs. EVERY, we use EACH to talk about only 2 things/people, we use EACH to talk about 2 or more people/things, we use EVERY for more than 3 people/things, we use EVERY for more than 2 people/things, with ALMOST, PRACTICALLY, JUST ABOUT we use, every, each, Some people prefer the green ones __ like the red ones., others, another, One man's meat is __ man poison., the other, another, MUCH and MANY are more __ equivalents of PLENTY OF/ A LOT OF/ LITTLE/ FEW, formal, informal, Which sentence means  'Not one of them likes running long distances'?, Not all of them like the thought of running long distances., None of them like the thought of running long distances., Is the sentence acceptable: There were less than 20 competitors., yes, no, yes but only in informal contexts, My aim is to complete the course and do it in __ than six hours., fewer, less, Choose the correct sentences:, I've been running regularly all of my life., I've been running regularly all my life., Both us decided to do more exercise., Both of us decided to do more exercise., We use 'some' in questions ('Would you like to hear some news?'), when we want to be more polite, when we expect the answer 'yes', in informal contexts.

排行榜

视觉风格

选项

切换模板

恢复自动保存: