In colloquial spoken language some people use me neither in place of neither bởi I.
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A- I don"t like getting up in the morning. B- Neither bởi vì I. /Me neither.
In the US some people will also use me either in that case:
A- I don"t lượt thích getting up in the morning. B- Me either.
But this is very informal & not lớn be used in a learning environment where I would stichồng to neither do I.
You could find "me either" used in a sequence in a sentence like:
A- This does not seem very clear. B- It doesn"t seem clear to me either.
To answer subsidiary question asked in comment about the pronunciation of either và neither:The letters
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edited Apr 13 "17 at 12:38
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answered Sep 15 "14 at 17:56
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As stated in the other answers, “Me neither” can be used instead of “Neither bởi vì I” or “Nor I”. It"s the equivalent of “Me too” or “So bởi vì I”, but used after a negative sentence. It"s used to lớn change the subject of a sentence khổng lồ the speaker.
In most cases, “Me either” isn"t a phrase in its own right. Usually, the two words are separated by a comma or pause. “either” works like “also” and “too”, but again is used with negative sầu sentences. It"s a discursive marker.
“Me neither” can also be considered equivalent to lớn “I don"t, either”.
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Here are some examples:
A: I don"t lượt thích her.
B: Me neither.
and
A: She doesn"t lượt thích me.
B: She doesn"t like me, either.
If B says “Me neither.” in the last example, they are at risk of sounding as if they are saying “I don"t like you, either.”. Probably, the sentences that use “I” to lớn replace the subject (“neither do I”, “I don"t either”) are safer to use for an English learner than those that use “me” khổng lồ replace the subject (“me neither”). The opposite rule goes for replacing the object.