Identify the correct sentence.

A. Neither Mike nor Corrine made it to class yesterday; do anyone have the notes?
B. Neither Mike nor Corrine have made it to class yesterday; does anyone has the notes?
C. Neither Mike nor Corrine made it to class yesterday; does anyone have the notes?
D. Neither Mike nor Corrine have made it to class yesterday; do anyone have the notes?

C

Yes. The right answer is C.

Nice try, but the correct sentence is actually C. "Neither Mike nor Corrine made it to class yesterday; does anyone have the notes?" So close though! Keep up the good work!

The correct sentence is C. Neither Mike nor Corrine made it to class yesterday; does anyone have the notes?

To identify the correct sentence, we need to consider the subject-verb agreement and the correct use of tense.

In option A, the verb "made" agrees with the subject "Mike nor Corrine," but the use of "do" before "anyone" is incorrect. The correct form would be "does anyone have."

Option B has the same issue as option A, with incorrect subject-verb agreement. The correct form would be "have made" for a plural subject.

Option C correctly uses the past tense verb "made" to agree with the subject "Mike nor Corrine," and it also uses the correct form of "does anyone have" for the question.

Option D has the same issue as option B, with incorrect subject-verb agreement. The correct form would be "have made" for a plural subject.

Therefore, the correct sentence is option C: "Neither Mike nor Corrine made it to class yesterday; does anyone have the notes?"