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  1. 17 de abr. de 2007 · spanish. Oct 12, 2008. #17. Hola! Estoy de acuerdo con que las conjugaciones de nobody, everybody & anybody se usan con el verbo en tercera persona del singular. Con respecto al tema de las canciones, si bien se han presentado muy buenos ejemplos hasta aquí, no olvidemos que en las canciones a veces se utilizan licencias literarias.

  2. 25 de mar. de 2010 · "I recommend nobody have a check card, as they are easily duplicated" Much much rarer (as is the English subjunctive in the first place), and a bit forced even in my example, but certainly possible. In normal indicative speech, "nobody" is a singular 3rd person, so it is "has" expect under special conditions, which do exist.

  3. 28 de jun. de 2013 · Jun 28, 2013. #1. Hola, en esta oración tengo dudas con To. Who did you speak to? Nobody. I didn't speak to anybody. Parece lógico porque sería "con nadie" Pero en esta otra oración por qué razón no necesita "to" como prepisición: Who did you see? (pause) Nobody. I didn't see - anybody.

  4. 8 de ago. de 2009 · Many many thanks. 2 is not ungrammatical, but it is an unusual thing to say and relies on the meaning of "one" as a singular number. "No one of them" is always singular; "none of them" can be either singular or plural: None of them is known to me. None of them are known to me. No one of them are known to me.

  5. 25 de mar. de 2006 · Nobody, like other indefinite pronouns, is frequently, though not without a tinge of guilt, followed by the plural pronouns they, them or their. For example, nobody wants to hear that their hero isn't a hero. This kind of construction, which is recorded in the OED from the C16th onward, seems likely to pass into unquestioned use in the C21st.

  6. 6 de ago. de 2006 · English / US. Aug 6, 2006. #2. Debe usar el verbo singular: "everybody is, everyone goes, etc." El asunto del pronombre posesivo es más complicado. Creo que lo más común es "their," aunque "his," "her," o "his o her" son considerados mas "correctos." Yo trato de evitarlo y decir algo como "they all go to their houses."

  7. 5 de ago. de 2006 · English, UK. Aug 6, 2006. #3. This is one of the peculiarities of English! Although "nobody" sounds singular, in the context the meaning is that no persons need to call (not that one particular person does not need to call) So, in this case, "nobody" can be considered plural. We could also say "no-one", and this also means "no persons", not one ...

  8. 11 de jul. de 2011 · English, USA. Jul 11, 2011. #2. "Me / I" is a point of contention in English. Some stick to "I" being used for the subject of a sentence only and "me" being used for the object of a sentence. Under that rule, "Nobody but I" is correct. I think it would be rare to hear someone say "Nobody but I will help you" in actual everyday conversation.

  9. 1 de abr. de 2007 · Atlanta, Georgia USA. USA English. Apr 1, 2007. #3. The reason you would not say 'almost nobody' is that the word nobody has the meaning exactly zero people. It doesn't make sense to say almost exactly zero people. Before anyone enters a room and after everyone leaves a room there is nobody in the room.

  10. 17 de ene. de 2014 · It is not uncommon to hear "I'm nobody," in everyday speech, where it often serves as a kind of disclaimer: "I'm nobody; but, in my opinion, this painting is awful." As Paula pointed out, it would be rude and cruel indeed to say, "You're nobody!"

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