例句 |
entireadjective not divided or scattered among several areas of interest or concernthis matter is important, so please give me your entire attention all, concentrated, exclusive, focused(also focussed), undivided, whole absolute, complete, full, lump, teetotal, thorough, total, unadulterated, unalloyed, unqualified, uttercomprehensive, intact, integral, perfect, unbroken diffuse, divided, scattered deficient, fragmental, fragmentary, halfway, incomplete, partial not lacking any part or member that properly belongs to itthe entire team needs to be present for the photograph compleat, complete, comprehensive, full, grand, intact, integral, perfect, plenary, total, whole unabridged, uncut, undiminishedall-out, exhaustive, extensive, maximalfull-blooded, full-blown, full-bore, full-fledged, full-on, full-out, full-scale imperfect, incomplete, partial abbreviated, abridged, cut, diminished, reduced entireadverbto a full extent or degreea shocking revelation that would destroy entire the false little world that she had carefully constructed for herself all, all of, all over, altogether, clean, completely, dead, enough, entirely, even, exactly, fast, flat, full, fully, heartily, out, perfectly, plumb(chiefly dialect), quite, soundly, thoroughly, through and through, totally, utterly, well, wholly, wide absolutely, categorically, cold, downright, hands down, plain, stone, stone-cold, unqualifiedlybasically, by and large, chiefly, generally, largely, mainly, more or less, mostly, overall, predominantly, predominately, primarily, principally, substantiallyabundantly, copiously, generously, greatly all the way, at length, down the line, down to the ground, for fair, in whole, to bits, to pieces, to the hilt, to the max half, halfway, incompletely, part, partially, partly barely, hardly, just, kind of, marginally, minimally, scarcely, slightly, superficiallyapproximately, roughly, somewhat adj.whole, entire, total, all mean including everything or everyone without exception.whole implies that nothing has been omitted, ignored, abated, or taken away.read the whole book entire may suggest a state of completeness or perfection to which nothing can be added.the entire population was wiped out total implies that everything has been counted, weighed, measured, or considered.the total number of people present all may equal whole, entire, or total.all proceeds go to charity in the 14th century |