We have no meanings for "constitute the whole" in our records yet.
1 Yet this hierarchy of firmly grounded opinions does not constitute the whole man.
2 Yes, in my opinion, Lupin's hiding-place does not constitute the whole of the problem.
3 I shall have to hold my sides for laughter-threepersons constitute the whole Society!
4 These impulses constitute the whole of man's achieving power.
5 Vital and momentous in itself, it does not constitute the whole organism, but only a part.
6 The ten or twelve who were visible seemed to constitute the whole crew of the craft.
7 But even these do not constitute the whole of his literary labors during these twenty-nine years.
8 And, yet, dialect poetry does not constitute the whole or even the bulk of Dunbar's work.
9 These did not constitute the whole country.
10 But it is the first one whose instructions constitute the whole civil and religious polity of the Hindoos.
11 But such incidents are rare, and cannot constitute the whole of my belief that Charles I was executed.
12 The stones, the green roof with its patina, the wood carvings in the church, constitute the whole castle.
13 Vital and momentous in itself, it does not constitute the whole organism, but only a small part of it.
14 As long as the clergy are supposed to constitute the whole church, church discipline would be nothing but priestly tyranny.
15 The interior of every mosque is empty; a small tribune for speakers, and a few glass lustres and lamps, constitute the whole decoration.
16 The three together constitute the whole of our public right; the first is its principle, the second its manner, and the third its expression.
Other examples for "constitute the whole"
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This collocation consists of: