5 responses

  1. Steve
    April 29, 2014

    I disagree, at least from a perspective of American English. I think there is no difference in denotation and no difference in connotation. I can’t really think of a case where it changes the mood of the sentence even, including in the examples you are giving.

    There are a few cases where people from one geography or another may prefer one over the other for aesthetic reasons, but I don’t really think of a case where any meaning is changed.

    I can interchange them in casual chat with a friend, text messages, or in formal writing (which I do a fair amount of) without changing the meaning. I’d say 100% interchangeable without changing the meaning.

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  2. MD TOUMIR ANSARI
    July 22, 2016

    very good

    Reply

  3. stephane
    September 4, 2017

    I would say that Some “one” and Some “body” is a difference. One is whole, body is just a part of a whole. “Somebody” is dualistic since it entails a separation between body and mind. “Someone” will be non dualistic more whole, wholly or holly, hence the appeal to this word. Think of Body as the lower aspect of the whole, the denser aspect of the One. In dualistic thinking body will be the Yin and Mind will be the Yang aspect. When you speak of “somebody” you are referring to a lower, denser aspect of the self. When you are speaking of someone, it is a complete being.

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  4. Aendy
    September 8, 2018

    If I read correctly and make it simple, I would remember this:
    Somebuddy, and some unknown one.

    Reply

  5. Kurt
    July 5, 2019

    I could have been a contender. I could have been somebody.

    Reply

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