I went to the country with both of them last year. So in these two examples, do you think it's fair to say that 'both' is part of the subject in the first but not in the second? Both of them are doctors.
What do you mean by being immensely grateful for both of them? Whichever you use, what do you think might be wrong with. I wonder if the meaning of the sentence changes at least a little with changing the position of the pronoun both:
'for both of them' is more commonly used, but both forms are right. The both of them went to the meeting together. They both just seems a little off, but that might just be me. Hi, i would like to understand why, in the example below, gramatically both of them would be incorrect and the right answer would be both of which:
In this case, 'both of them', a plural form, is closer to the verb 'has', so i thought 'has'. But actually, one or both of them has already disengaged emotionally from the marriage. I would use both of them. Why this rather than .