wholes in English

noun
1
a thing that is complete in itself.
the subjects of the curriculum form a coherent whole
synonyms:entityunitbodydiscrete itemensemble
2
all of something.
the effects will last for the whole of his life
synonyms:allevery partthe lotthe sumthe sum totalthe entirety
noun

Use "wholes" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "wholes" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "wholes", or refer to the context using the word "wholes" in the English Dictionary.

1. They interact as wholes, not as bits.

2. If equals are added to equals, the wholes are equal.

3. As dynamic wholes, these all share certain characteristics: a certain liveliness, for one.

4. 27 In gestalt psychology and gestalt psychotherapy,(www.Sentencedict.com) people's thoughts and emotions are seen as complex wholes.

5. It is a matter of learning the word Contextually as a fragment of sentences which one learns to bring forth as wholes under appropriate circumstances.

6. It is a matter of learning the word contextually as a fragment of sentences which one learns to bring forth as wholes under appropriate circumstances.

7. Asyndeta, when delivered, do not elicit an imitation of pas-sions depicted through tone and rhythm; rather the rhythmic shape of spoken syntax evokes a récognition of readily perceiv-able wholes

8. Combined investigations with SALS, scanning electron microscope and IR absorption measurements suggest the partially crystalline and light scattering structures to be either stretched and deformed as wholes or to be “unpicked” from the edges in the direction of pulling.

9. ‘Similarly, Contextualism and organicism are world hypotheses that tend to see things in terms of wholes, even though they are preoccupied with different dimensions.’ ‘Simulation, evocation, Contextualism: call it what you will, but this thing that we designers are so good at seems to serve a basic human need.’

10. In other words , the riddle of biophys - ics is to discover how the fortuitous concourse of myriads of blind and chaotic molecules while obeying the laws of physics and chemistry become ' at the same time integrated into organic wholes , capable of entropy - decreasing ani - mated activity . The problem , therefore , is to trace the very real differences in the behaviour of animate and inanimate matter to their objective foundations in some kind of spatio - temporal relationships . E . Schrodinger was the first to divine the nature of this difference when he formulated his ' order from order ' principle , which is " the real clue to the understanding of life " .