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Everywhere

Everywhere is an adverb that denotes presence or influence in all places, or in a very wide range of locations. It is used to express ubiquity, scope, or pervasiveness. Examples include statements like “The scent of flowers was everywhere” or “Everywhere I go, I meet friends.” The term can be literal or figurative and is common in everyday language, journalism, and literature to convey reach beyond a single locale.

Origin and form: Every plus where forms a compound within English. The combination has been in use

Usage and nuance: Everywhere often appears with verbs of perception, movement, or diffusion (see, go, spread,

In modern usage, everywhere also features in titles, slogans, and media as a rhetorical device to imply

since
the
early
modern
period,
reflecting
a
construction
that
pairs
a
universal
determiner
with
a
place-related
pronoun.
The
word
differs
from
phrases
such
as
worldwide
or
global
in
its
more
explicit
locational
emphasis;
it
implies
coverage
of
all
locales
rather
than
simply
broad
scope.
appear).
It
can
signal
complete
diffusion,
but
in
practice
it
is
figurative
and
context-dependent;
nothing
is
literally
everywhere
in
a
physical
sense.
In
philosophy
and
theology,
omnipresence
expresses
a
comparable
idea
of
being
present
in
all
places
at
all
times,
whereas
in
everyday
speech
everywhere
tends
to
convey
immediacy
or
commonality.
universal
relevance
or
pervasive
reach,
from
advertising
to
storytelling.