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Your son won’t have had breakfast when you arrive.
His son won’t have had breakfast when you arrive.

2007-09-11 01:17:04 · 5 answers · asked by Nama S 1 in Society & Culture Languages

5 answers

Your son won’t have had breakfast when you arrive. Neither will his son.

Your son won’t have had breakfast when you arrive and his son won’t either.

2007-09-11 01:22:18 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 2 2

neither ur son nor his will have had breakfast when u arrive .
either ur son or his will not have had breakfast when u arrive .
your son won't have had breakfast when u arrive . Neither will his son .
Your son won't have had breakast when u arrive . His son will not , either .

4 are correct I think . Your question should be : can u combine these two sentences by using either OR neither? Can't use neither and either in the same sentence . Be happy !

2007-09-11 09:35:58 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Your son either won’t have had breakfast when you arrive His son won’t have had breakfast when you arrive neither

2007-09-11 08:38:23 · answer #3 · answered by Tundra V 2 · 0 2

The only way to put these two sentences together using proper syntax is:

Neither your son nor his son will have had breakfast when you arrive.

Or: Your son won't(will not) have had breakfast when you arrive; his son won't either. (very bad syntax)

The rule of thumb is NEITHER - NOR, EITHER - OR. e.g.: NEITHER BLACK NOR WHITE.....
EITHER COME IN OR GO OUT...

2007-09-11 08:54:53 · answer #4 · answered by AmericanPatriot 6 · 3 0

Neither your son nor his son will have had breakfast when you arrive.

2007-09-11 08:53:43 · answer #5 · answered by Goddess of Grammar 7 · 2 0

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