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.”

Comments

Popular posts from this blog