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- Dictionarywhole/həʊl/
adjective
- 1. all of; entire: "he spent the whole day walking" Similar Opposite
- 2. in an unbroken or undamaged state; in one piece: "owls usually swallow their prey whole" Similar Opposite
noun
- 1. a thing that is complete in itself: "the subjects of the curriculum form a coherent whole" Similar
- 2. all of something: "the effects will last for the whole of his life" Similar
adverb
- 1. used to emphasize the novelty or distinctness of something: informal "the man who's given a whole new meaning to the term ‘cowboy’"
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