We have no meanings for "whole mode" in our records yet.
1 The writer can get new models only by changing his whole mode of life.
2 And we can see here in this incident at Cana the whole mode of prayer.
3 The whole mode of life was different from anything to which she had been accustomed.
4 Now, as the weeks passed, his whole mode of life affected both mind and body.
5 Their eating, and whole mode of living, their manners and customs, are those of Bedouins.
6 Probably the whole mode of thought of the nations must be altered before physical progress is possible.
7 The treatment must be hygienic and thorough, and may necessitate a change in your whole mode of life.
8 It is characteristic of Goethe's whole mode of procedure that he at once changed the question, 'What is colour?'
9 Indeed, her whole mode of thought was suited better to home life than to the world, and to a more free existence.
10 Perjury and forgery were resorted to in order to establish charges, and the whole mode of conducting trials was a burlesque of justice.
11 The whole mode of life here," she writes, "tends indeed to render the people frivolous, and, to borrow their favorite epithet, amiable.
12 At first, with Malherbe, you may think it, like the architecture, the whole mode of life, the very dresses of that time, fantastic, faded, rococo.
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This collocation consists of: Whole mode across language varieties