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(@mrafee)
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Joined: 13 years ago

Is there a particular reason that we should write 'cannot, and not 'can not'?

This may be one of those hope-not-to-have-gotten-pedantic questions!

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(@grantbarrett)
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Joined: 18 years ago

It's just a matter of style and usage habits rather than any particular thing ordained by the syntax or orthography of the language. Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of English Usage has a good entry about it.

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(@Anonymous)
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Actually it can make a difference.   If I write "I can not do that", I may mean that I am unable to do it, or that I am able to not do it.   So I (with my habitual horror of ambivalence) always use "cannot" when I mean the former.

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(@dadoctah)
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Joined: 16 years ago

It's probably connected with the inconsistency in indefinite pronouns:

everything, anything, something, nothing
everybody, anybody, somebody, nobody
everyone, anyone, someone, no one

Why is no one the only one that can't be a single word?

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(@Anonymous)
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Ron Draney said

Why is no one the only one that can't be a single word?

I have wondered that my self many times.   The only answer I ever got was that it would look like noon and cause a pause in reading.   It makes sense but I don't know if that was the original reason.

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