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1 buong
whole -
2 buô
whole, entire, rotund, all, total, plenary, intact -
3 kabuoan
whole, aggregate, entirely, rotundity, all (1) -
4 kalahatan
whole, epidemic (1), all (1), amount (1), totality -
5 sang--
English Definition: (affix) the whole; the whole unit; one, in its entirety, as SANG-ANGAW, the whole one million -
6 baha
Active Verb: bumahaPassive Verb: bahainEnglish Definition: 1) flood (noun) 2) to flood (phenomenal verb)Examples: 1) Binaha ang buong bayan. (The whole town was flooded.) 2) Bumaha dahil sa lakas ng ulan. (It flooded because of the strong rain.) -
7 damag
English Definition: (adv) /mag-/ the whole night -
8 litson
English Definition: (noun) roast pig (usually a whole roasted pig)See a picture -
9 pala
English Definition: (part) so; an exclamation of surprise, as IKAW PALA! So, it is you!Notes: when used after HINDI, expresses contrast with one's expectation; a reversal, as ANG ISIP KO'Y BALAT LAMANG NG ITLOG ITO, HINDI PALA, KUNDI ITLOG NA BUO. I thought this was only an eggshell, but no, it was a whole egg. -
10 Hindi ko kayang kainin lahat
I can't eat the whole thing -
11 lahat
entire, whole, total--------everybody, every-one -
12 magaling
excellent, skillful, well, great, very well, whole
См. также в других словарях:
Whole — Whole, a. [OE. hole, hol, hal, hool, AS. h[=a]l well, sound, healthy; akin to OFries. & OS. h?l, D. heel, G. heil, Icel. heill, Sw. hel whole, Dan. heel, Goth. hails well, sound, OIr. c?l augury. Cf. {Hale}, {Hail} to greet, {Heal} to cure,… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
whole — [hōl] adj. [ME (Midland) hool, for hol, hal < OE hal, healthy, whole, hale: akin to Ger heil, ON heill < IE base * kailo , sound, uninjured, auspicious > Welsh coel, omen] 1. a) in sound health; not diseased or injured b) Archaic healed … English World dictionary
whole — adj 1 entire, *perfect, intact Analogous words: sound, well, *healthy, robust, wholesome: complete, plenary, *full Contrasted words: *deficient, defective: impaired, damaged, injured, marred (see INJURE) 2 … New Dictionary of Synonyms
whole — ► ADJECTIVE 1) complete; entire. 2) emphasizing a large extent or number: a whole range of issues. 3) in an unbroken or undamaged state. ► NOUN 1) a thing that is complete in itself. 2) (the whole) all of something … English terms dictionary
Whole — may refer to: *Holism, (from holos, a Greek word meaning all, entire, total) the idea that all the properties of a given system cannot be determined or explained by the sum of its component parts alone * in music, a whole step, or Major second *… … Wikipedia
whole — [adj1] entire, complete accomplished, aggregate, all, choate, completed, concentrated, conclusive, consummate, every, exclusive, exhaustive, fixed, fulfilled, full, full length, gross, inclusive, in one piece, integral, outright, perfect, plenary … New thesaurus
Whole — Whole, n. 1. The entire thing; the entire assemblage of parts; totality; all of a thing, without defect or exception; a thing complete in itself. [1913 Webster] This not the whole of life to live, Nor all of death to die. J. Montgomery. [1913… … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
whole — I (undamaged) adjective aggregate, all, complete, entire, gross, intact, solid, total, undiminished, unhurt, unimpaired, unreduced, without loss associated concepts: whole capital, whole estate, whole quantity, whole truth II (unified) adjective… … Law dictionary
whole — hōl adj containing all its natural constituents, components, or elements: deprived of nothing by refining, processing, or separation <whole milk> … Medical dictionary
whole|ly — «HOH lee, HOHL lee», adverb. = wholly. (Cf. ↑wholly) … Useful english dictionary
whole — whole1 W1S1 [həul US houl] adj [: Old English; Origin: hal healthy, unhurt, complete ] 1.) [only before noun] all of something = ↑entire ▪ You have your whole life ahead of you! ▪ His whole attitude bugs me. ▪ We ate the whole cake in about ten… … Dictionary of contemporary English