Bar None
You use bar none to add emphasis to a statement that someone or something is the best of their kind. He is simply the best goalscorer we have ever had, bar none.
Every Single
We often use single with every to emphasise each member of a complete group of people or things: He was the only player who played in every single match last season.
Everything or Every Thing
Difference in Meaning: ‘every thing’ refers to things as individual things or units, while ‘everything’ refers to all things as a collective unit. Consider these examples: We need every thing on this list.
Adverbials Examples
The definition of adverbial is to have the same function as an adverb (a word that is a verb, adjective or other adverb). An example of an adverbial phrase is a clause which describes a verb (i.e. to say “Before Aunt Mabel came over…” instead of “Yesterday”).
Adverbials are words that we use to give more information about a verb. They can be one word (angrily, here) or phrases (at home, in a few hours) and often say how, where, when or how often something happens or is done, though they can also have other uses.
Every Day as a Prepositional Phrase
We can easily substitute each day for every day, so this is correct. Here, in every day is a prepositional phrase. In is the preposition, day is the object of the preposition, and every is an adjective.