Either, Neither, etc.


Either, Neither, etc.

[ezquiz type=fill] title: Fill in the blanks with too, either, neither, both…and, either…or, neither…nor, all of… or none of… q: “I can’t find Mike.” “I haven’t seen him __________.” a: either q: “Are you going to the conference this Friday?” “I am. Chris is going __________.” a: too q: Peter, Bob and Jane think it’s very difficult, and __________ them could do it. a: none of q: “We can go by BTS or MRT. What do you want to do?” “__________. Let’s take a cab. It’s faster.” a: neither q: “Should we buy the Dell or the Lenovo computers?” “You could buy __________. They’re both good.” a: either q: I won’t be there tonight, and __________ will Jake. a: neither q: I have already asked Will, Derek and Marcus, but __________ them are free next week. a: none of q: Go ahead and do it because __________ us will support you. a: all of q: “I’m not sure whether the customer will accept our offer.” “__________ am I.” a: neither q: Sam got here on time, and Bruce did __________. a: too q: __________ Wednesday or Thursday is fine. I don’t mind which day. a: either q: “At first she didn’t want to do it.” “__________ did I.” a: neither q: He isn’t very good at his job, and he doesn’t speak English very well __________.” a: either q: “I thought the presentation was great.” “Me, __________. I loved it.” a: too q: You can come __________ today __________ tomorrow. I’m free on both days. a: either or q: This week is difficult for me, and next week doesn’t work __________. a: either q: I have spoken to the team members, and __________ them like the idea. a: all of q: I was very happy with our performance, and my boss was __________. a: too q: Have you seen __________ Anne __________ Mike? I need to talk to one of them. a: either or q: “This morning I didn’t arrive on time for the meeting.” “Jane was late, ________.” a: too [/ezquiz]