noone
English
Usage notes
- Noone is formed in parallel to the formation of nobody, anyone, and everyone, but it is considered incorrect because of the doubled vowels creating a temptation to read and pronounce it as "noon" (/nuːn/).
- American users (COCA) prefer the spelling no one to either noone or no-one by more than 500 to 1.
- UK users (BNC) prefer no-one to noone 50 to 1 and no one to noone 12 to 1.
Etymology 2
From Middle English none, noune, from Old English nōn (“noon; the ninth hour”). Cognate with Dutch noen, Icelandic nón. More at noon.
Further reading
- (noone*50), no one at Google Ngram Viewer
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