Drop the "every" part and you can see the word that needs to be agreed with.
"One is supposed to do such and such."
"Everyone is supposed to do such and such."
"They are supposed to do such and such."
"People are supposed to do such and such."
I think that's the case for all the "every <noun>". "Every human is a person", for example. This would make sense, to put it in programming terms - the verb applies to an element in an array of people, not the array itself (which would be plural): for every single human, that human is a person.
> The words everybody and everyone are pronouns that describe a group of people, but grammatically they are singular. The last part of each word is a singular noun: body and one.
'Everyone' is treated as singular (aside from 'everyone are' sounding completely wrong).
Drop the "every" part and you can see the word that needs to be agreed with.
This also applies with "some" https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantifier_(linguistics)Part of the confusion may be that "everyone" is a single word while the example sentence in the Wikipedia article has a non-compound example.
The quantifier does not change the grammatical number of the subject.I think that's the case for all the "every <noun>". "Every human is a person", for example. This would make sense, to put it in programming terms - the verb applies to an element in an array of people, not the array itself (which would be plural): for every single human, that human is a person.
Confidently incorrect.
No, grammatically "everyone" is an indefinite pronoun. a single collective unit.
Is that a British thing? Nobody in North America uses "everyone are"
https://www.britannica.com/dictionary/eb/qa/Everybody-Has-or...
> The words everybody and everyone are pronouns that describe a group of people, but grammatically they are singular. The last part of each word is a singular noun: body and one.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Encyclopædia_Britannica
> Though published in the United States since 1901, the Britannica has for the most part maintained British English spelling.
It's not.