all
1. quantifier; used with either mass or count nouns to indicate the whole number or amount of or every one of a class (Freq. 247) - we sat up all night - ate all the food - all men are mortal - all parties are welcome • Ant: some, no • Similar to: each, every, every last 2. completely given to or absorbed by (Freq. 3) - became all attention • Similar to: complete
to a complete degree or to the full or entire extent ('whole' is often used informally for 'wholly') (Freq. 26) - he was wholly convinced - entirely satisfied with the meal - it was completely different from what we expected - was completely at fault - a totally new situation - the directions were all wrong - it was not altogether her fault - an altogether new approach - a whole new idea • Syn: wholly, entirely, completely, totally, altogether, whole • Ant: partly (for: wholly) • Derived from adjective: total (for: totally), complete (for: completely), entire (for: entirely), whole (for: wholly) • Usage Domain: colloquialism
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