The difference between “everyone” and “every one”
✅ 1. “Everyone” (one word)
Meaning: all people, everybody — used as a pronoun.
It refers to all members of a group collectively.
👉 Examples:
- Everyone is happy.
- Everyone knows the answer.
- I invited everyone to the party.
💡 Think of it as meaning “all people together.”
✅ 2. “Every one” (two words)
Meaning: each individual person or thing in a group — used as a phrase (determiner + pronoun).
It emphasizes each individual separately.
👉 Examples:
- Every one of the students passed the exam.
→ (Meaning: Each individual student passed.) - I checked every one of the letters carefully.
→ (Meaning: I checked each letter one by one.)
💡 Think of it as meaning “each single one.”
🔍 Key Difference Table
| Expression | Meaning | Focus | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Everyone | All people (collectively) | Whole group | Everyone enjoyed the concert. |
| Every one | Each individual (separately) | Individual members | Every one of the tickets was sold. |
🧠 Tip to Remember:
If you can replace it with “all people,” use “everyone.”
If you can replace it with “each one,” use “every one.”
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