With everything considered (and neglecting details)
An assemblage of parts or details (as in a work of art) considered as forming a whole.
Sinónimos
Examples for "altogether"
Examples for "altogether"
1You could of course eschew government debt altogether, looking elsewhere for diversification.
2The change in the wind was altogether in favor of the brigantine.
3Problem is, your self-restraint is so good you often skip meals altogether.
4Or to talk about how to create a completely new system altogether.
5However it stopped short of calling on banks to stop bonuses altogether.
1God is all in all; God is good; hence all is good.
2Taking it all in all, the scene was spectacular in the extreme.
3It was all in all to her; to him it was nothing.
4I feel every thing entirely, all in all and all in etc.
5It is, all in all, the best biography of Washington in existence.
1But several analysts said that on the whole the report was positive.
2The Prelude is on the whole the finest part of the drama.
3Someday we hope to prepare a definitive article on the whole subject.
4The ideas of his poetry are noble and on the whole clear.
5The tendency of it is, on the whole, in the opposite direction.
1He had the happy eye for the tout ensemble in a fine landscape.
2He never contemplates the tout ensemble.
3It is so not alone by virtue of its magnitudes, but by virtue of the whole its tout ensemble.
4Mrs. G. W. was tastefully dressed in a ' tout ensemble,' and was greeted with deafening applause wherever she went.
5I might say much about aliments considered as a tout ensemble, and about the various modifications they undergo by mixing, etc.
6T'ree dollar one chambre, four dollar one chambre- "shesuddenly spread her hands to include both-"sevendollar de tout ensemble!"
7A strong chin strap secured the cap upon the head, and the " tout ensemble" formed a very effective roof, completely sun-proof.
8Tout ensemble, Fr., all together.
9'His tout ensemble is striking?'
Translations for tout ensemble