Hi
Just read Amy’s sentence about “each and every day”–every day as two words. Keeping that in mind, what should I use-- each and everything or each and every thing?
Many thanks,
Tom
Hi
Just read Amy’s sentence about “each and every day”–every day as two words. Keeping that in mind, what should I use-- each and everything or each and every thing?
Many thanks,
Tom
.
The latter; however, it is a different case. ‘Everyday’ is a distinct adjective meaning ‘humdrum, ordinary’.
.
Just to make sure that I understood you correctly, MM…
Each and [color=blue]every thing (two words) is the correct version??
Tom
.
Yes.
.
Hi Tom
Maybe it would be easier to look at “each and every” as a fixed collocation meaning “every single”. Thus:
Many thanks, MM and Amy.
Results from Ms. Google can be misleading.
:shock:
google.com.om/search?hl=en&q … g%22&meta=
:shock:
google.com.om/search?hl=en&q … arch&meta=
Tom
Hi Tom
Horrifying, isn’t it? :lol:
Torsten mentioned a new search engine named “Cuil” the other day. Interestingly, Cuil doesn’t provide a single example of “each and everything” on the first page of its results. All of the results on the first page are simply “everything” or “and everything”:
cuil.com/search?q=%22each+and+everything%22
But, it does provide results on the first page for “each and every thing”:
cuil.com/search?q=%22each+and+every+thing%22
.