All / Every / Whole
Choosing between all, every, and whole to talk about complete groups, frequency, and entirety
Everybody / Everyone / Everything vs. All
When you want to say “100% of people” or “100% of things” in a general way, use everybody, everyone, or everything — not all by itself.
- The CEO thanked everybody for their hard work. (not
all thanked) - She checked the contract and everything looked fine. (not
all looked fine) - Before the audit, everyone submitted their reports on time.
All on its own sounds incomplete. Instead, pair it with a noun, with of, or place it after the subject:
| Pattern | Example |
|---|---|
| all + noun | *All employees must attend the training.* |
| all of + us/you/them | *All of them passed the certification exam.* |
| subject + all | We all agreed on the new schedule. |
| all about | The workshop covered all about data security. |
| all = the only thing(s) | *All I need is the signed form.* |
Whole and All
Whole means complete or entire. Use it with singular countable nouns:
- I spent the whole afternoon preparing the slides. (= the complete afternoon)
- She read the whole report before the meeting. (= every page, start to finish)
- Our team worked on a whole new proposal from scratch.
Do not use whole with uncountable nouns. Use all instead:
| Uncountable noun | Correct | Incorrect |
|---|---|---|
| money | *all the money* | |
| information | *all the information* | |
| equipment | *all the equipment* | |
| luggage | *all my luggage* |
Notice the word order difference. Whole goes after the/my/a, while all goes before:
- I read the whole contract. (the + whole + noun)
- I reviewed all the data. (all + the + noun)
Every Day vs. All Day vs. The Whole Day
These three expressions look similar but mean different things.
Every tells you how often something happens (frequency):
- We have a stand-up meeting every morning. (= each morning, repeatedly)
- The server backs up every six hours.
- Performance reviews happen every six months.
All day and the whole day mean from start to finish (duration):
- I was in back-to-back meetings all day. (= the complete day)
- She spent the whole week onboarding the new hires.
Note: say all day, all week, all morning — without “the”. But with whole, you need the article: the whole day, the whole week.
| Expression | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| every time | each occasion | *Every time I open the app, it crashes.* |
| all the time | always, continuously | The printer jams all the time. |
Every / Everybody / Everyone / Everything + Singular Verb
Even though these words refer to multiple people or things, they take a singular verb:
- *Every desk in the office has a monitor.* (not
have) - *Everybody is expected at the all-hands meeting.* (not
are) - *Everything was ready for the product launch.* (not
were)
However, use they/them/their to refer back to everybody/everyone:
- *Everyone submitted their timesheet on Friday.* (= his or her timesheet)
- *Everybody said they enjoyed the team dinner.*
Quick Self-Check
_____ in the department has completed the safety training.
Select your answer:
Did you spend _____ money from the project budget?
Select your answer:
We have a team sync _____ Monday at 9 a.m.
Select your answer:
I was stuck in the workshop _____. I didn't even have time for lunch.
Select your answer:
Every seat in the conference room _____ taken before the keynote started.
Select your answer: