one word "everyday"
Clarification:
It can be both, depending on how it is used. For example, in the following sentence you can see how both ways are used:
Every day after getting home from school she had to change from her good clothes into her everyday clothes.
Two words - "one day".
No. It is two words, every night.The word everyday actually means ordinary, not happening every day.
Two.
Just one word.
'Good Day' is two words.
Someone is one word when you are referring to a person.
Two words....every day.
Two words - "one day".
No. It is two words, every night.The word everyday actually means ordinary, not happening every day.
According to my spell checker, it's two words. Note: Do not rely on spell checkers. They are incompetent, every single one.
Two.
Just one word.
Every day is a two-word phrase pronounced ev-ree-DAY; everyday is an adjective (meaning common, usual, unexceptional) pronounced EV-ree-day. Every day we hear everyday words spoken.
The correct grammar is "He goes someplace every day." "Someplace" is one word, and "every day" should be two words when used as an adverb to describe how often he goes to that place.
No, it is an adjective, meaning "ordinary" or "typical," and it describes a noun. He wore his everyday coat during the month of October, but when the weather got colder, he changed to a ski parka. The word "everyday" describes what kind of coat it was (his typical coat, the one he always wore in this kind of weather). Note that there is also a two word phrase "every day"-- the word "every" is an adjective, meaning each one, all of them. Here too, "every" describes the word "day." Every day, the school bus arrives at 7 AM.
'Good Day' is two words.
"Everyone" is one word when used in a sentence like "Everyone went to the fair." In this case it is a collective noun, the group is thought of as a whole. "Every one" can be used as two words in sentences like "Every one of my brothers is bald." In this case the group is thought of as discrete individuals (each and every one)