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Hello, I'm Sam from BBC Learning English,
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and today we're going to look at the difference
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between 'all' and 'everybody' or 'everyone',
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when talking about people.
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In both cases we're talking about a group
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of people and the meaning is simple.
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They both mean '100% of the group'. But, how
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we use them in a sentence is slightly different.
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Let's look at these examples:
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I invited some friends to a party this weekend.
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They all came! Everybody came!
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So, in the first example, we have
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'the subject + all + the main verb'.
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It's not correct to say 'all came'
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without using the subject 'they' before 'all'.
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But if you want to make the sentence shorter,
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you can use 'everybody' or 'everyone' as the subject
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of the sentence - so,
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'everybody + the main verb'.
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So I hope you 'all' understand and
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'everybody' will do the quiz now.