A glance at the assembled guests told him what he already knew - that no one looked quite as good as he did.
But no one really knows what it means.
But no one seemed to anticipate what has happened in the last two years.
But that is exactly what no one is now willing to do.
Lucian writes like no one except himself.
The mangoes grew wild on Tioman; no one seemed to claim them as private property.
The vendor will almost certainly say that no one knows more about the business than the management.
What the purpose of the paintings was, no one knows for certain.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatorno people►no one/nobody
no person or people: · No-one was home, so I left a note.· He explained what had happened but nobody believed him.no one at all/nobody at all: · Nobody had supported him, nobody at all.
►not a soul
no one - use this when it is unusual or surprising that there is no one somewhere: · It was strange. There wasn't a soul in the street.not a soul to be seen/not a soul in sight: · Steve looked in every room, but there was no sound and not a soul to be seen.
not anyoneSYN nobody: No one likes being criticized. There’s no one else I really want to invite apart from you. Has no one phoned about the car? No one can say I didn’t warn you.GRAMMAR: NegativesDon’t use another negative word such as ‘not’ or ‘nothing’ after no one. You say: · No one did anything to help.✗Don’t say: No one did nothing to help.USAGE: No one, none of, neither of• Don’t use ‘of’ after no one. ✗Don’t say: no one of us | no one of his parents• You use none of when talking about a group of three or more people: · None of us saw him.• You use neither of when talking about two people: · Neither of his parents went to the wedding.