• Are these two words also interchangeable (like someone/somebody)? Since "somebody" is more formal that someone is "anybody" more formal than "anyone"?
  • Find synonyms, antonyms and the meaning of the anybody in our free online dictionary! Find words starting with anybody and anagrams of anybody.
  • Take a look at the following graph showing the relative frequency of “anyone interested” and “anybody interested” in English literature ... and “any body”.)
  • usage: The pronoun anybody is always written as one word: Is anybody home? The two-word noun phrase any body means “any group” (Any body of students...
    • Did anybody call?
    • I don't know how anybody can believe that.
    • I thought I heard someone outside, but when I looked there wasn't anybody there. [=no...
  • "Anyone" can sound a little more formal than "anybody", but it usually doesn't matter.|Agree w silent|They are the same.
  • Is this anybody's coat? We use else after indefinite pronouns to refer to other people or things: All the family came, but no one else.
  • We use anyone, anybody and anything to refer to both an open, unlimited set of things or people and specific things or people. We use them with a singular verb
  • Anybody is a big family that combines an affinity for Eurostile plus a heavy dose of 90s inspiration. ... Learn more at www.etceteratype.co/anybody.
  • anybody. From Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Jump to navigation Jump to search. ... Everybody who wants to be anybody will come to Jake's party.