0
Lucas21c Posted 11 years ago
Grammar

Everybody vs everyone

Is "Everybody doesn't like to drink" the same as "Everyone doesn't like to drink?"
  

Top answer

Yes, but both are awkward and ambiguous. Use one of the following, depending on what you mean: Not everyone/everybody likes to drink. No one / Nobody likes to drink.

  • Yes, but both are awkward and ambiguous.
  • Use one of the following, depending on what you mean: Not everyone/everybody likes to drink.
  • No one / Nobody likes to drink.
Free · every Monday

Get the Weekly English Kit 📬

New words, one handy idiom, and a 2-minute quiz — delivered to your inbox to keep your streak alive.

3 Answers
0
Yes, but both are awkward and ambiguous. Use one of the following, depending on what you mean:

Not everyone/everybody likes to drink.
No one / Nobody likes to drink.
0
Is the meaning of "Not everyone/everybody likes to drink" different from "No one / Nobody likes to drink," right?

Related Questions