<p>Okay I am very confused about this grammar rule. Are all three of these sentences correct?</p>
<p>-Either a pineapple or some oranges are on the table.
-Neither Meredith nor you are expected to finish the work today.
-Either Don or you is going to lead the class discussion on Tuesday.</p>
<p>I’m using the Barron’s Writing Workbook. They say all three of the senteces are gramatically correct but I don’t see how the last one is. I’m confused because they say “either” and “neither” are singular then they say that with “or” or “nor” the verb agrees with the closest verb? So in the last sentence, shouldn’t it be “Either Don or you are going to lead…” That doesn’t sound right either. I’m confused. </p>
<p>So is the rule that “either” and “neither” always take singular verbs or does it agree with the closest noun? Or is it something else altogether? Can someone help? Thanks!</p>
<p>Correct me if im wrong. But when a verb is presented in the sentence along with the names of two things,people,places, or ideas (nouns), then you must use neither or either to justify your sentence.
Did that help at all?</p>
<p>The 3rd sentence is wrong. It’s supposed to be “Either Don or you ARE”, since the rule is that the verb agrees with the closest subject (from what I read in Barrons SAT II Writing Workbook).</p>
<p>But in the Barron’s it says that the form I have typed above is actually correct! I have the writing workbook for the new sat, if there is a difference.</p>
<p>It is unlikely that an actual college board exam would include a question with an ambiguous answer since, unlike prep book questions, college board questions are reviewed by multiple panel members and introduced as unscored “experimental” questions for validation prior inclusion as scored questions in an exam.</p>