0What was the original context? There's no real difference between "everyone there" and "everyone down there" except that the speaker considers the place where "everyone" is to be "down" in some sense from where he is. It's pretty vague -- he could be talking about people on a lower floor in the building, or people in a city to the South of where he is speaking, or down in a valley, or "downt
0 01b01font00We often use "down" to mean "south of the point of reference". "Up"= north, "back" = east, and "out" = west. This is AmE, of course.02font02b00 0-