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Anduy  #452219  Tue, 11 Dec 07 10:04 PM
Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.
Everyone look like they are enjoying the party.

Please tell me which sentence is the correct one.
Thank you.

  
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Grammar Geek  #452222  Tue, 11 Dec 07 10:20 PM

Everyone looks...

(Be aware that there are some people who will insist you say "looks as though" rather than "looks like." I'm not one of them.)

  
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Yoong Liat  #452358  Wed, 12 Dec 07 09:57 AM

 Anduy wrote:
Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.
Everyone look like they are enjoying the party.

Please tell me which sentence is the correct one.
Thank you.

Although 'everyone' means 'all the people', a singular verb has to be used.

Every apple is rotten.

Every one of the apples is rotten.

Every one of my friends is helpful.

Everyone is helpful.

Everybody is helpful.

As long as you see 'every' in  a sentence the verb in such constructions has to be singular.

  
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Philip  #452476  Wed, 12 Dec 07 04:08 PM
 Yoong Liat wrote:

 Anduy wrote:
Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.
Everyone look like they are enjoying the party.

Please tell me which sentence is the correct one.
Thank you.

Although 'everyone' means 'all the people', a singular verb has to be used.

Every apple is rotten.

Every one of the apples is rotten.

Every one of my friends is helpful.

Everyone is helpful.

Everybody is helpful.

As long as you see 'every' in  a sentence the verb in such constructions has to be singular.

Correct.  Assuming you are a teacher, I'm wondering if you have a way of explaining to your students what you have said here and then using a plural pronoun (they) to refer to the singular antecedent.  I can't explain it to my own native logic.
  
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Yoong Liat  #452498  Wed, 12 Dec 07 05:02 PM
 Philip wrote:
 Yoong Liat wrote:

 Anduy wrote:
Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.
Everyone look like they are enjoying the party.

Please tell me which sentence is the correct one.
Thank you.

Although 'everyone' means 'all the people', a singular verb has to be used.

Every apple is rotten.

Every one of the apples is rotten.

Every one of my friends is helpful.

Everyone is helpful.

Everybody is helpful.

As long as you see 'every' in  a sentence the verb in such constructions has to be singular.

Correct.  Assuming you are a teacher, I'm wondering if you have a way of explaining to your students what you have said here and then using a plural pronoun (they) to refer to the singular antecedent.  I can't explain it to my own native logic.

Could you give me an example of such a sentence so that I can hope to explain, using my non-native logic?

  
Anonymous  #452728  Thu, 13 Dec 07 11:34 AM
 Yoong Liat wrote:

Could you give me an example of such a sentence so that I can hope to explain, using my non-native logic?

He was clearly asking you about this one:

Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.

  
Grammar Geek  #452788  Thu, 13 Dec 07 01:55 PM
Can't we just say that because English lacks a non-gender-specific singular third-person personal pronoun (that applies to people - we don't like being called "it"), and because attempts to invents such a word have been unsuccessful, we sometimes use the plural form to avoid implying that the statement applies only to males or only to females. And when we use that plural from, the verb agrees with the plural pronoun. Although non-gender-specific singular third-person personal pronoun is quite a mouthful!
  
Yoong Liat  #452789  Thu, 13 Dec 07 01:59 PM
 Anonymous wrote:
 Yoong Liat wrote:

Could you give me an example of such a sentence so that I can hope to explain, using my non-native logic?

He was clearly asking you about this one:

Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.

Strictly speaking, it should be Everyone looks like he or she is enjoying the party.

Here again the singular verb 'is' used.

However to be avoid mentioning the gender, in modern English, the sentence is rephrased as "Everyone looks like they are enjoying the party.

This is how I would explain the usage to my students.

  
Grammar Geek  #452790  Thu, 13 Dec 07 02:01 PM

Hi Yoong Liat - Absolutely, that's what the original poster was asking - but I think Philip was asking about the Everyone (singular)... their (plural).

  
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