entirety (noun)

  • 81comprehensiveness — I noun blanket, breadth, capacity, comendiousness, completeness, complex, copiousness, coverage, ensemble, entireness, entirety, exhaustiveness, expansion, extensiveness, full realization, fullness, great scope, inclusiveness, integrality,… …

    Law dictionary

  • 82totality — I noun aggregate, aggregation, allness, collectivity, completeness, comprehensiveness, entireness, entirety, entity, everything, gross, integration, lump, mass, sum, totalness, unity, whole associated concepts: totality of the circumstances II… …

    Law dictionary

  • 83whole — 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

  • 84fill or kill order — ( FOK; FOK order) A trading order that is canceled unless executed within a designated time period. A market or limited price order that is to be executed in its entirety as soon as it is represented in the trading crowd, and, if not so executed …

    Financial and business terms

  • 85complement — I (New American Roget s College Thesaurus) n. rest, extra, counterpart, opposite; personnel, staff. v. t. complete, realize, fulfill, fill or round out; balance, offset, neutralize. See completion, part. II (Roget s IV) n. 1. [That which… …

    English dictionary for students

  • 86Esperanto and Ido compared — This article attempts to highlight the main differences between Esperanto and Ido, two constructed languages that have a related past but have since parted ways. Ido was invented in the early 20th century after a schism between those who believed …

    Wikipedia

  • 87Comparison between Esperanto and Ido — Esperanto …

    Wikipedia

  • 88Demonym — A demonym (  /ˈdɛm …

    Wikipedia

  • 89Tolkien's legendarium — Legendarium redirects here. For other uses, see Legendary (disambiguation). This article is about the Tolkien legendarium in general. For the book by Verlyn Flieger and Carl Hostetter, see Tolkien s Legendarium. The phrase Tolkien s legendarium… …

    Wikipedia

  • 90Split infinitive — A split infinitive is an English language grammatical construction in which a word or phrase, usually an adverb or adverbial phrase, comes between the marker to and the bare infinitive (uninflected) form of a verb. For example, a split infinitive …

    Wikipedia