"Nobody want to go there," or "nobody wants to go there"?

In English, the number 0 is treated as plural. It is then:

  • 0 seconds
  • 1 second
  • 1.2 seconds
  • 2 seconds

Shouldn't it be "nobody want to go there," instead of "nobody wants to go there"?

I also saw in TOEFL that "any __" should be used with a singular. But I see it very common that it is a plural also. Why is that? (updated: example, "we don't have any apples any more" vs "If you get any apple, please let me know.")


  • Zero cars have driven by.
  • Not one car has driven by.

Both of these sentences are fundamentally describing the same thing semantically and yet they demand different number agreement. Both of these are possible because grammatical number agreement is only partially informed by semantics.

Just because some descriptions of a lack of something have plural number agreement, that doesn't mean that all descriptions of a lack of something must have plural number agreement.

So, it is true that zero takes plural number agreement, and nobody takes singular number agreement. However, there is no reason that these have to work in the same way.


I have no idea what your second question (regarding TOEFL) could mean. Any can refer to singulars or plurals — it completely depends on what is in that blank space.

  • Is there any water left? (Singular verb agreement for grammatically singular water)
  • Are there any cookies left? (Plural verb agreement for grammatically plural cookies)

Nobody—like everybody, anyone, and anything—is a singular indefinite pronoun. Thus, the correct sentence is "Nobody wants to go to there."


Nobody is singular, and that is not related with the fact any number different from 1 (one) is considered plural.

Nobody was at home.
Nobody could predict how it might end.

Any can be used as both singular, and plural.

I don't have any choice.
Do you have any tips to pass on?
If there is any left, throw it away.

[The examples are taken from the New Oxford American Dictionary.]