释义 |
whole adjective—整 adj (often used) 全 adj 一 adj 全部 adj Examples:lit. inquire of the tripods (idiom); fig. to plan to seize power of the whole country—lit. fill the whole sky and cover the land; everywhere—materialism, philosophical doctrine that physical matter is the whole of reality—the whole course of an event from beginning end—spend the whole day eating (i.e. not doing any work)—the whole country, from the leadership the rank and file—lit. stare at the ceiling while writing a book (idiom); to put one's whole body and soul into a book—technical word used in psychology meaning the whole is more than the sum of its parts—merge together (idiom); to unify disparate elements into one whole—original identity fully revealed (idiom); fig. unmask and expose the whole truth—exercise sole hegemony (idiom); to dominate a whole area (market, resources etc)—real face fully revealed (idiom); fig. unmask and expose the whole truth—lit. open one's liver and drip gall (idiom); whole-hearted loyalty—bamboo writing slips in ancient times (joined together form whole scrolls)—the whole nest came out (idiom); turn out in full strength—formidable renown gives one authority over the whole country—break up the whole into pieces (idiom); dealing with things one by one—tour around (the whole country, the whole city etc)—lit. red-bellied devotion (idiom); whole-hearted loyalty—the whole truth is revealed (idiom); everything becomes clear—lit. one phoenix feather; fig. a glimpse that reveals the whole—a realistic overall view of the whole situation—fig. when one falls in disgrace the whole family is doomed—One careless move and the whole game is lost. [idiom.]— |