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  • What is the proper usage of not only. . . but also?
    Not only did my friend Joe help me out, but he also drove me to the university Not only does my pet dog bite me, but he also barks at me ;-) Not only are there students in the room, but also parents (here, the parents are there part is not quite required, so you don't have to say but parents are also there because it's implied )
  • Why can you say “not only will I” but not “not only I will”?
    In contrast, the ordering restriction in (1) (2) does not seem to apply to any of these versions, where the verb is fine to follow the subject once you’ve moved not only around a bit in the sentence: I will not only be skipping the breakfast, but the lunch too I will be skipping not only the breakfast, but the lunch too I will be not only
  • grammaticality - The correct usage of Not only in the beginning of a . . .
    Not only have not these conditions been prepared in developed countries, but also have developing countries not accepted them As @EdwinAshworth has commented, sentence 3 has a different meaning because the other two sentences refer to acceptance by developing countries, whereas the last sentence refers (implicitly) to preparation by developing
  • grammar - Not only, but also (Verb Form) - English Language Usage . . .
    If one subject is singular and the other is plural, and the words are connected by the words "or," "nor," "neither nor," "either or," or "not only but also," use the verb form of the subject that is nearest the verb And I came across this question: Not only the students but also the teacher (was, were) anxious to finish the lesson
  • Difference between (Both. . . and ) and ( Not only . . . but also )
    The two structures could easily mean the same thing, but not here First, we have also and too, too Second, the sentence says that dogs like cats, because of the placement of do I like The matching form would be I like not only cats but also dogs or Not only do I like cats but I like dogs too –
  • Can we use Not only, but too instead of Not only, but also,?
    The candidates campaigned not only in Perth but also in Darwin The candidates campaigned not only in Perth but in Darwin, too Note the position of the adverbs
  • prepositions - . . . In not only. . . vs. . . . not only in. . . ? - English . . .
    "not only in" is acceptable, I think, but I find the following nicer: *The paper helps us not only select a methodology but also in other important ways " Or *The paper is helpful not only in selecting a methodology but also in other important ways " –
  • grammaticality - Is not only. . . but as well. . . grammatical? - English . . .
    That, however, is not to say that it is an ideal sentence Readers might expect as well , coming at that stage in the sentence, to be part of as well as for which they will look in vain In terms of style, it might be preferable to break the sentence into two, ending the first at writers and beginning the second with In addition, one can watch
  • grammar - Not only X but also Y are (is?) - English Language Usage . . .
    In your first example it was "Not only X, but also a Y is on the table " The focus is on Y But in your second example it is "An X, and also a Y, are on the table " The focus is on X+Y So yes, in that situation, "are" is the correct word to use
  • Not only. . . , but also without but - English Language Usage Stack . . .
    Usually, a "not only" feels lost without a "but also" to pal around with However, it is idiomatically possible and acceptable to omit the "but also " Burchfield gives this example: "Rowers not only face backward, they race backward " Authority: The New Fowler's Modern English Usage edited by R W Burchfield





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