All or whole?
All and whole are determiners.
We use them before nouns and with other determiners to refer to a total number or complete set of things in a group.
Compare
| All the cast had food poisoning. They were forced to cancel the show. | all + determiner + noun |
| The whole cast had food poisoning. They were forced to cancel the show. | determiner + whole + noun |
- All my family lives abroad. or My whole family lives abroad.
We often use all and the whole with of the:
- She complains all of the time. or She complains the whole of the time.
We use a/an with whole but not with all:
- I spent a whole day looking for that book and eventually found it in a little old bookshop on the edge of town.
- Not: …
all a day…
All or whole for single entities
We use the whole or the whole of to refer to complete single things and events that are countable and defined:
- The whole performance was disappointing from start to finish. (or The whole of the performance was disappointing …)
When we can split up a thing into parts, we can use either whole or all with the same meaning:
- You don’t have to pay the whole (of the) bill at once.
- You don’t have to pay all (of) the bill at once.
- She ate the whole orange.
- She ate all of the orange.
We often use the whole of with periods of time to emphasise duration:
- We spent the whole (of the) summer at the beach.
All the with uncountable nouns
We use all the and not the whole with uncountable nouns:
- She was given all the advice she needed.
- Not:
She was given the whole advice… - All the equipment is supplied.
All and whole with plural nouns
We usually use all the and all of the with plural nouns:
- It’s funny when all the actors come in dressed up in their costumes.
- She opens all the cupboard doors and doesn’t close them after her.
- You have to try all of the activities.
When we use whole with plural nouns, it means ‘complete’ or ‘entire’.
Compare
| Whole families normally shared one room in the nineteenth century. | entire families |
| All families normally shared one bedroom in the nineteenth century. | each and every family |
All and whole: typical errors
We don’t use all before a and an:
- She ate a whole bar of chocolate in one go.
- Not:
She ate all a bar…
We can’t omit the before whole with a singular noun:
- We travelled throughout the whole country.
- Not: …
throughout whole country.