Talk:everyone

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Equinox in topic everyone can also refer to animals

Singular/plural edit

How about adding some information to this article as whether this word is plural or singular? --Mortense 17:07, 29 December 2010 (UTC)Reply

everyone's --or-- everyones' I'd like to know too... 71.183.80.207 18:17, 1 January 2015 (UTC)Reply
"Everyones'" would mean "belonging to everyones", and that isn't a word, so it's always "everyone's". Equinox 18:19, 1 January 2015 (UTC)Reply

of anyone I know edit

The American Heritage Dictionary reads

Anyone is often used in place of the more logical everyone in sentences like the most intelligent person of anyone I know.
In our 2017 ballot, the Usage Panel accepted it 55 percent to 45 percent, while rejecting the supposedly correct alternative 69 % to 31 %.
Presumably an idiomatic reading, “compared to any single person I know,” outweighs the literal reading “out of all the people I know.”
The implication of a one-by-one mental comparison may explain why the expression survives.

However, I find the explanation contradictory, because the meaning "of everyone I know" is also on the lines of “out of all the people I know.”

Also, I can't fully grasp what the author means by a "one-by-one mental comparison." --Backinstadiums (talk) 10:26, 10 September 2020 (UTC)Reply

everyone can also refer to animals edit

cant it? IsraeliEditor54 (talk) 12:39, 6 February 2023 (UTC)Reply

Not usually. Maybe the way that person can, too, in animal fairy-tales etc. Equinox 20:11, 6 February 2023 (UTC)Reply
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