Everyone vs Everybody
Everyone and everybody are indefinite pronouns that confuse many students of English language as both mean the same and are used interchangeably by people. If one tries to look up in dictionaries, he finds that both the pronouns mean every person, and there is not much of a difference between the two. In fact, one is given as a synonym of the other in most dictionaries. Does this mean one can make use of the either in all situations and contexts? Let us take a closer look.
Everyone
If a teacher wants to convey the impression that each student has to be present during the test that she is going to give tomorrow, she is more likely to use the word everyone. Take a look at the following sentence.
Everyone should be present tomorrow
It is clear that the teacher wants every person in the class to be present at the time of the test. In this sense, everyone implies each and every person in the class. Everyone is more formal and sounds intimate and personal.
Everybody
Everybody is also an indefinite pronoun just like anybody and somebody, and it is used just like everyone in a sentence though many feel it is much less formal and should be confined to spoken English only. “Hi everybody” is what one says when he enters a place and greets his friends. In a class, a teacher usually asks students to sit down by saying “everybody take seat, please.” Everybody sounds casual and applies in a general sense.
What is the difference between Everyone and Everybody?
• Everybody and everyone are indefinite pronouns not having much of a difference in their meaning.
• One can use either as they are interchangeable without being called grammatically incorrect though everyone seems more formal and suitable for written English while everybody sounds more casual and fit for spoken English only.
• Everyone is more personal and intimate whereas, everybody is casual and sounds general.
Master key says
Great. Thanks so much.