all

all — noun

1. the total amount of effort, strength, or energy that a person can put into a tas

1.名詞B2
釋義

the total amount of effort, strength, or energy that a person can put into a task — the maximum someone has to give.

例句

Noa gave her all during the marathon and collapsed past the finish line.

give one's all + during [activity]

The young pianist offered her all to the audience at the Chopin contest in Warsaw.

offer one's all + to + audience

同義詞
  • best

    very close in meaning ('give one's best'), slightly more common in everyday speech.

  • utmost

    more formal; emphasises the highest possible level of effort.

  • everything

    broader; can refer to objects or effort, but lacks the fixed 'one's ___' pattern.

反義詞
  • nothing

    the complete absence of effort or contribution.

文法句型

give one's all

do one's all

用法筆記

Almost always appears with a possessive determiner (my/his/her/their all) and verbs of effort or sacrifice such as give, offer, donate, or leave. Distinguish from the pronoun sense ('all of it / everyone'), which refers to total quantity rather than personal commitment.

常見錯誤

She gave all in the match.
She gave her all in the match.
💡this noun sense needs a possessive; bare 'all' here sounds incomplete.
He did his all the work yesterday.
He did all the work yesterday.
💡'his all' is the noun (total effort); 'all the work' uses the determiner sense.

all — adjective

all — adverb

all — determiner

all — pronoun

all — prefix