whole

/həʊl/ (bre, ipa) · /həʊl/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈhōl/ (ame, mw) · /hoʊl/ (ame, ipa)

whole — adjective

  • wholepositive
  • wholercomparative
  • wholestsuperlative

1. Containing all its parts, with nothing taken away, divided, or missing — for exa

1.形容詞A2
釋義

Containing all its parts, with nothing taken away, divided, or missing — for example, eating a whole cake, reading a whole book, or a whole family.

例句

Noa ate the whole cake by herself before anyone else could have a slice.

whole + noun for complete amount

Did you read the whole book or just the first two chapters?

同義詞
  • entire

    Interchangeable in most contexts; 'entire' sounds slightly more formal.

  • complete

    Focuses on all necessary parts being present, while 'whole' emphasizes unity.

  • full

    Often used with time periods ('a full day') but less common with objects ('full cake' is unusual).

反義詞
  • partial

    Referring to only part of something rather than the entire thing.

  • incomplete

    Missing some parts or elements.

文法句型

whole + noun

the + noun + is whole

用法筆記

Typically used with a determiner such as 'the', 'my', or 'a' before it. 'The whole cake' means all of one cake, while 'all the cake' could mean pieces from different cakes.

常見錯誤

I ate whole pizza by myself.
I ate the whole pizza by myself.
💡When 'whole' means 'entire', it usually needs a determiner like 'the' or 'my' before it.

2. Used before a noun to stress that the amount, size, degree, or importance of som

2.形容詞A2
釋義

Used before a noun to stress that the amount, size, degree, or importance of something is very large — for example, a whole lot of trouble, a whole month, or a whole new way of doing things.

例句

We had a whole lot of trouble finding a parking spot near the stadium.

a whole lot of + noun (large quantity)

Hugo spent a whole month travelling through Southeast Asia after graduation.

同義詞
  • complete

    Can overlap in phrases like 'a complete mess', but 'complete' lacks the informal emphatic tone of 'whole'.

  • total

    Often interchangeable ('a total disaster'), though 'total' can sound slightly more dramatic.

文法句型

a whole + [adjective] + noun

a whole lot of + noun

a whole + [number] + noun

用法筆記

Only used before a noun (attributive position). You cannot say '*The trouble was whole' in this sense. Common in informal and conversational English with phrases like 'a whole lot', 'a whole bunch', 'a whole new...'.

常見錯誤

There were whole lots of people at the park.
There were a whole lot of people at the park.
💡'a whole lot' is a fixed expression; including the article 'a' is essential.

3. Physically healthy, not hurt, injured, or damaged — for example, walking away fr

3.形容詞B1
釋義

Physically healthy, not hurt, injured, or damaged — for example, walking away from a crash unharmed and whole, or recovering from an illness to be whole again.

例句

After the car accident, Christopher walked away whole and completely unharmed.

predicative use: walked away + whole

Tara's doctors said it would take months, but she is whole again now.

同義詞
  • unharmed

    Specifically means not physically hurt, often after a dangerous event.

  • uninjured

    Very close in meaning; 'uninjured' is more clinical, 'whole' more personal.

  • healed

    Focuses on recovery from a wound or illness rather than not being harmed.

反義詞
  • injured

    Physically hurt or wounded.

  • hurt

    In pain or discomfort from an injury.

文法句型

be whole

come back whole

remain whole

emerge whole

用法筆記

Most common in predicative position after verbs like 'be', 'emerge', 'walk away', 'come back'. Attributive use ('a whole person') is rare and could be confused with the ENTIRE sense (adj/1).

常見錯誤

He was whole after the surgery.' (ambiguous — could mean 'entire body' rather than 'healthy').
He made a full recovery and is whole again.
💡Add context to make the 'healthy' meaning clear.

4. Describes a brother or sister who shares both biological parents with another si

4.形容詞B2
釋義

Describes a brother or sister who shares both biological parents with another sibling, as opposed to a half-sibling who shares only one parent.

例句

Hugo and his sister are whole siblings, not half-siblings from a previous marriage.

whole sibling contrasts with half-sibling

Yan adopted a child but also has three whole children of her own.

同義詞
  • full sibling

    The more modern, formal alternative; 'full brother' and 'full sister' are more common than 'whole brother/sister'.

反義詞
  • half-sibling

    A brother or sister who shares only one biological parent.

文法句型

whole + brother

whole + sister

whole + sibling

用法筆記

Almost always appears before a family-relation noun ('brother', 'sister', 'sibling'). Less common in everyday conversation; people often just say 'brother' and clarify 'same parents' if needed.

常見錯誤

She is my whole sister.' (unnatural in everyday speech).
She is my full sister' or 'We have the same parents.
💡'Full sibling' is more common than 'whole sibling' in everyday English.

whole — adverb

whole — noun