0 including everything and/or everyone; complete -- seluruhnya
1 not broken; in one piece -- sebiji-sebiji
She swallowed the biscuit whole.
The different parts were joined to form a whole.
3 the entire thing -- sepanjang masa
Ordinary women's inferior rights to land were a key aspect in women's subordination as a whole.
The citizens of the country constitute an organic whole, which is integrated by the general will of the masses.
Soldiers were to be seen there as they were to be seen everywhere - but on the whole these were pacific regions.
Higher ranks are given to sources that are more generalizable to the population as a whole.
The multiple roles that people hold within their family, community, work, and society as a whole work to define their sense of self.
Formal political influence over policy increased gradually over the whole period at the expense of technical influence, and social objectives were given priority.
They were then told to put the sounds together to say the whole word.
Are we being told the whole story, or only that part of it which suits the author's purpose?
中文繁体
全部的, 整個的, 整體的…
More中文简体
全部的, 整个的, 整体的…
MoreEspañol
todo, entero, entero/ra [masculine-feminine…
MorePortuguês
todo, inteiro…
More日本語
全体の, 全部の…
MoreTürk dili
tüm, bütün, tümü…
MoreFrançais
tout / tout (before a vowel) or toute (before a consonant), entier/-ière, complet/-ète…
MoreCatalan
tot, sencer…
More