all
everything
The question is not very clear. Do you want to use "everything" or another word in a sentence? Everything must be clear in order to get a good answer.
in unison
the word "nothing"
Pungaleh means absolutely EVERYTHING! everything in the galexy is a pungaleh its a universal word you can use which means every single thing you can imagine possible. But don't we already have a word for everything, WHICH IS EVERYTHING?? NO! everything only means everything which actually only means one thing. Where pungaleh means everything INCLUDING THE WORD EVERYTHING. examples; if you see something that you've never seen before, and you don't know what it is called, you can say it's a pungaleh and it would technically be correct. WHY? because pungaleh is everything! another example is; if your at school and you have a test, and you have no idea what the answer is, you can write that the answer is pungaleh and it would technically be correct! you can write ALL your answers as pungaleh and it would be correct! unless it says "be specific" then you have to be specific :( you now learnt a new word! :)
everything
The question is not very clear. Do you want to use "everything" or another word in a sentence? Everything must be clear in order to get a good answer.
in unison
OMNIPOTENCE
A person who appears to know everything is sometimes called 'omniscient' meaning infinitely wise or smart. If someone only 'thinks' that they know everything, but they truly do not, then they are simply naive, egotistcal, or ignorant.
anything you want in the world-Orin Paschall
'Gilding the lily' and 'creative writing' come to mind... but context is everything...
Studium est omnia is one Latin equivalent of 'Zeal is everything'. Zelum est omnia is another equivalent. In the word by word translation, the nouns 'studium' and 'zelum' mean 'zeal'. The verb 'est' means '[he/she/it] is'. The noun 'omnia' means 'everything'.
You might want to think how it could be if you think of what it is. Like the texture and everything. It is just a suggestion.
It is neither. The word everything is a pronoun or a noun (e.g. he lost everything, as the object).
The word 'with' is not a noun. The word 'with' is a preposition, a word placed before a noun to show the relationship of that noun to another word in the sentence. Examples:She mixed the batter witha fork.I like the yellow dress with the white collar.We had a slight accident with another car.He ran the race with everything he had.
Yes, everything is a compound word made up of 'every' and 'thing'.