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"Is everything alright" and "Is anything alright"
What an American native speaker understands in the one case and what in the other one?
Aug 22, 2017 4:29 PM
Answers · 8
4
"Is everything alright" is something you might ask a person who looks like they are sad or hurt or otherwise having a bad day. For example "you look tired today. Is everything alright?" It's a very common phrase.
"Is anything alright" is a far less common phrase. One might use this if everything seemed to be going badly as a way of saying "so many things are going badly -- is anything alright?" (with an emphasis placed on the "anything").
August 22, 2017
"Is everything alright?" you ask as a usual question about someone's state when you're dubious about it
"Is anything alright?" you ask, f.e. when everything went far too bad and you're asking in other words:"Is At Least anything alright (besides this mess that surrounds you)?"
August 22, 2017
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Constantina
Language Skills
English, Greek
Learning Language
English
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