(Definition of everyone from the Cambridge Advanced Learner's Dictionary & Thesaurus © Cambridge University Press)

There is no difference in meaning between everyone and everybody, but everyone is more common in written English, and everybody is more common in spoken English.

Care should be taken to distinguish between everyone as a single word and every one as two words, the latter form correctly being used to refer to each individual person or thing in a particular group: every one of them is wrong

Everyone has heard of it. However, similar to what occurs with collective or group nouns like crowd or team, sometimes a plural pronoun refers back to everyone which is also reflected in verb conjugations: Everyone was laughing at first, but then they all stopped.

Everyone refers to every person or every individual within a group or population. It is an inclusive term that encompasses all individuals regardless of their characteristics, attributes, or backgrounds.

EVERYONE definition: every person; everybody. See examples of everyone used in a sentence.

each or every person, as in "Everyone enjoyed the party" or "Not everyone voted in this year's elections"

You write it as one word: Everyone enjoyed the concert. You use every one when you mean 'every person or thing in a group, considered as separate people or things'.

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