- britannica.com dictionary/entire
- We spent the entire [=whole] day at the beach.
- He had entire [=complete, total] control of the project.
- The war affected an entire generation of young Americans.
- comparewords.com entire/intire(4) Only seven films (or 0.7 percent of the entire cohort) showed nodular or rounded opacities of the type typically seen in uncomplicated silicosis.
- whichiscorrect.com entire-vs-entire/Common searches that lead to this page: how to spell entire, correct spelling of entire, how is entire spelled, spell check entire, how do you spell entire.
- definitions.net definition/entireAn action is entire when it is complete in all its parts; or, as Aristotle describes it, when it consists of a beginning, a middle, and an end. Spectator, №. 267.
- blog.harwardcommunications.com 2016/11/17/how-to-…“Entire” and “whole (of the)” are synonyms and usually interchangeable. “Entire” is more formal. “Entire” can be used with singular countable nouns, e.g.
- en.wikipedia.org EntireEntire may refer to: Entire function, a function that is holomorphic on the whole complex plane. Entire (animal), an indication that an animal is not neutered.
- collinsdictionary.com dictionary/english/entire
- He had spent his entire life in China as a doctor.
- There are only 60 swimming pools in the entire country.
- The entire family was staring at him, waiting for him to speak.
- vocabulary.com dictionary/entireFrom there it developed into the 14th-century Old French entier , meaning "unbroken or complete," and then, through Middle English, into our modern word entire .
- m.dict.cc english-russian/entire.htmlThe first section was opened to traffic in 1979 (also the first segment of the entire Nagoya Expressway Network) and the entire route was completed in 1985.
- thesaurus.com browse/entireFind 37 different ways to say ENTIRE, along with antonyms, related words, and example sentences at Thesaurus.com.