everywhere
everywhere — adverb
1. happening or present in every possible location, or throughout all parts of a pa
happening or present in every possible location, or throughout all parts of a particular area
Reema searched everywhere for her passport before her flight to Manila.
search everywhere for [something]
Yuki has traveled everywhere in Taiwan, from Taipei to the beaches of Kenting.
The children left their toys everywhere after the birthday party on Saturday.
Small coffee shops have appeared everywhere in this neighborhood over the last two years.
Everywhere Wei went during his trip, he took photos of the local street art.
- all over
more informal; often suggests a surface or area rather than individual locations ('crumbs all over the floor')
- throughout
more formal; emphasizes every part of a bounded area ('throughout the city')
- far and wide
idiomatic expression; emphasizes great distances from many directions
- nowhere
opposite meaning — not in any place
- not anywhere
alternative negative form
用法筆記
Can be placed at the end of a clause (most common), before the subject in an adverbial clause pattern (everywhere + subject + verb), or after a verb. In informal spoken English, everywhere can function as a subject ('Everywhere looks the same to me').
常見錯誤
everywhere — noun
1. all places or locations, thought of as one complete set or whole
all places or locations, thought of as one complete set or whole
People came from everywhere to enjoy the music festival in the park.
from everywhere — noun after preposition 'from'
Everywhere in the old quarter felt quiet after the tourists had gone home.
'Everywhere' as subject of a sentence (noun use)
Élise received postcards from everywhere her friends had visited that summer.
The smell of fresh bread came from everywhere in the morning market near the river.
- all places
more literal and formal; used in writing
- every place
standard phrase; slightly more formal than 'everywhere'
用法筆記
Typically follows a preposition such as 'from,' 'in,' 'at,' or 'to.' When used as a subject of a sentence, the verb is singular ('Everywhere in the house feels cold'). This noun use is less common than the adverb use and sounds slightly more literary or emphatic.