Example: That is why you wear them every day.
Hint: If you can replace it with each day, use every day.
Every day refers to something happening each day. Everyday means something that is common, ordinary. Also: everyday is an adjective. Meaning, something can be everyday: "an everyday sight." In every day, every is the adjective describing day. You can't say "I go to the store everyday" because it's grammatically incorrect.
im pretty sure its everyday
The word is spelled everyday. It can be written as "everyday" as in: "She wore her everyday clothes to a wedding." Or it can be written as "every day", as in: The boy called his girlfriend every day."
You don't meet an everyday hero every day.
"Every body" should only be used when referring to each BODY that people have, or in a phrase such as "every body of water." "Everybody" is equivalent to "everyone."
Every day refers to something happening each day. Everyday means something that is common, ordinary. Also: everyday is an adjective. Meaning, something can be everyday: "an everyday sight." In every day, every is the adjective describing day. You can't say "I go to the store everyday" because it's grammatically incorrect.
Every day is a phrase meaning every day. It takes its stress on the "day." Everyday is a word meaning "commonplace." It takes its stress on the "ev-".
Every vote in an election is important because one vote could be the difference between a terrible official being elected versus a great one being elected.
A regular user is someone who would use the computer everyday to complete tasks or jobs. An occasional user would use the computer every so often, but not every day.
No.
there is a difference I just don't know it
every thing
mechanical can hold up to life but medication is needed every day for life biological is a more normal life but have to re op. 10- 20 years gl
Guess it depends on how often she smokes it. There's a difference between smokeing it every other day, and smokeing it once a month. And she shouldn't be smokeing it to begin with -__-
every thing
im pretty sure its everyday
The difference between "at least" and "at most" is not restricted to probability. The difference is simply one between the precise meaning of the phrases in every day English language.