No, None, and Any (+ nothing/nobody/nowhere)
Using no, none, any, nothing, nobody, and nowhere correctly in sentences
No + Noun
Use no directly before a noun. It means the same as not a or not any.
- There was no parking space near the office, so I parked two blocks away.
- We have no budget for new equipment this quarter.
- The manager gave no explanation for the schedule change.
No works well at the start of a sentence:
- *No decision has been made yet.*
- *No employees were affected by the outage.*
None (Without a Noun)
Use none on its own when the noun is already clear from context.
- How many meeting rooms are free this afternoon? — None. They’re all booked.
- I checked all three printers. None are working.
Use none of before a specific group:
| Pattern | Example |
|---|---|
| none of + the/my/this… + noun | *None of the applicants had the right qualifications.* |
| none of + them/us/it | *None of them replied to the email.* |
After none of + plural noun, the verb can be singular or plural. Both are correct:
- *None of the reports were submitted on time.*
- *None of the reports was submitted on time.*
Comparing No, None, and Any
| Sentence type | Example |
|---|---|
| no + noun (positive verb) | There is no reason to delay the launch. |
| none (alone or + of) | How many complaints did we get? — None. |
| not … any (negative verb) | We don’t have any reason to delay the launch. |
These say the same thing in different ways:
- I have no time. = I don’t have any time.
- There were no errors. = There weren’t any errors.
Nothing, Nobody/No-one, Nowhere
These compound words work the same way as no — they carry the negative meaning, so the verb stays positive.
| Word | Meaning | Example |
|---|---|---|
| nothing | not anything | There’s nothing wrong with the proposal. |
| nobody / no-one | not anybody | *Nobody volunteered to lead the project.* |
| nowhere | not anywhere | The file is nowhere on the shared drive. |
You can rewrite these with not … any-:
- I said nothing. = I didn’t say anything.
- *Nobody attended the training.=We didn’t get anybody at the training.*
- There’s nowhere to park. = There isn’t anywhere to park.
Never Use a Double Negative
When the subject or object already contains a negative word (no, nothing, nobody, etc.), keep the verb positive. Do not add not.
- I said nothing. (not
I didn’t say nothing.) - *Nobody knows the password.* (not
Nobody doesn’t know the password.) - There is nowhere to sit. (not
There isn’t nowhere to sit.)
Nobody/No-one + They
After nobody or no-one, use they/them/their to refer back to the person:
- *Nobody brought their laptop to the offsite meeting, did they?*
- *No-one in the department has finished their evaluation yet.*
Any = “It Doesn’t Matter Which”
Sometimes any does not mean “some” in a question or negative — it means “whichever one you like.” Compare:
| no- (zero quantity) | any- (it doesn’t matter which) |
|---|---|
| There was no meeting room available. | You can book any meeting room. They’re all free. |
| *Nothing can fix this bug before launch.* | The bug is so minor that anything would fix it. |
| *Nobody wanted the night shift.* | It’s easy work. Anybody could do it. |
Quick Self-Check
We checked every supplier. _____ of them could deliver before Friday.
Select your answer:
The new intern asked a lot of questions, but _____ could answer them.
Select your answer:
I looked everywhere, but there was _____ useful in the old archives.
Select your answer:
There is _____ budget left for training this year.
Select your answer:
The task is simple. _____ with basic Excel skills can do it.
Select your answer: