You are right, not everything is plural or singular. It is a determiner and can be used with counted and uncounted nouns and alone. You found some very good example sentences. Let’s look at them one by one. 19
What is right, all is or all is?
When an author means “all of this,” he must use “is.” If she means “all”, she should use “are”. So it depends on whether your collaborator was thinking about the whole dish or the different things in it: “All [soup] back to the simmer” or “All [ingredients] back to the simmer”. 18
Everything unique?
Everything is a plural pronoun. Each and everyone is unique. All are damaged is correct. 28
What is right, all is or all is?
When an author means “all of this,” he must use “is.” If she means “all”, she should use “are”. So it depends on whether your collaborator was thinking about the whole dish or the different things in it: “All [soup] back to the simmer” or “All [ingredients] back to the simmer”. 18
Do you use is or are with all?
If the noun is singular, use . When it is plural or there is more than one noun, use are.
Is everything singular or plural?
However, if we want to specify the things or persons being discussed, we can use whole or part with nouns and pronouns and the correct corresponding singular or plural verb forms.
Who is or is everything?
Both are wrong. “Who’s coming to the cinema? or “Who’s coming to the cinema with me?” are more appropriate. MT_Heads’ answer seems correct to me regarding Southern US English, but the situation is slightly different in Indian English as all are the correct plural for the verb.
Is everything ok ?
“Everything is fine” is fine. In your second example, the word “everything” needs to be written in one word, and the sentence itself looks clunky. You could say something like, “Everything is fine.”
Is everything singular or plural?
You are right, not everything is plural or singular. It is a determiner and can be used with counted and uncounted nouns and alone. You found some very good example sentences. 19
Do we put s?
If you’re referring to a general rule, or if you’re talking about ALL items in a category (all trees, all computers, all schools), you must add s. Also remember not to use the noun before the plural when referring to a general category. This sentence is in the present tense.
Is everything singular or plural?
You are right, not everything is plural or singular. It is a determiner and can be used with counted and uncounted nouns and alone. You found some very good example sentences. 19