whole|wholes in English
noun
[həʊl]
totality; completeness; entirety
Use "whole|wholes" in a sentence
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. But whole!
8. A whole consists of parts, the parts Constitute the whole
9. Parts compose the whole, and the whole Comprises the parts.
10. Whole arm.
11. A whole consists of parts, the parts constitute the whole.
12. Parts compose the whole, and the whole Comprises the parts
13. The parts, on the other hand, compose the whole or Constitute the whole or make up the whole
14. Divide (a whole) into Aliquots; take Aliquots from (a whole)
15. I built up this whole business, my whole life for you.
16. 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
17. “You must love Jehovah your God with your whole heart and with your whole soul and with your whole mind and with your whole strength.” —MARK 12:30.
18. Whole Life Insurance
19. The disease has struck the whole community, sometimes wiping out whole families.
20. Dogs are not our whole life, but they do make some lives whole.
21. White whole wheat has almost the same nutrient content as red whole wheat.
22. The whole town's abuzz.
23. HemAgglutination; Whole bacterial cells
24. Soon, whole world implodes.
25. There's that whole tradition.