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Từ điển Oxford Advanced Learner 8th
entire
en·tire BrE [ɪnˈtaɪə(r)] NAmE [ɪnˈtaɪər] adjective only before noun (used when you are emphasizing that the whole of sth is involved)including everything, everyone or every part Syn: ↑whole • The entire village was destroyed. • I wasted an entire day on it. •I have never in my entire life heard such nonsense! •The disease threatens to wipe out the entire population. Word Origin: late Middle English (formerly also as intire): from Old French entier, based on Latin integer ‘untouched, whole’, from in- ‘not’ + tangere ‘to touch’. Thesaurus: entire [entire] adj. only before noun •The entire village was destroyed. whole • • total • • full • • complete • Opp: partial a/an entire/whole/full/complete day/set the entire/whole/total population your entire/your whole/a full life Entire or whole? Entire emphasizes sth more strongly than whole and is used especially to emphasize how bad sth is: •I wasted an entire/a whole day on it. • We spent the whole day on the beach. ✗ We spent the entire day on the beach. Example Bank: •I wasted a whole/an entire day on it.
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