whole

/ˈhōl/

Middle English hool healthy, unhurt, entire, from Old English hāl; akin to Old High German heil healthy, unhurt, Old Norse heill, Old Church Slavic cělŭ

adjective

  1. free of wound or injury : unhurt

  2. recovered from a wound or injury : restored

  3. being healed

perfect whole entire intact mean not lacking or faulty in any particular. perfect implies the soundness and the excellence of every part, element, or quality of a thing frequently as an unattainable or theoretical state. whole suggests a completeness or perfection that can be sought, gained, or regained.

noun

  1. a complete amount or sum : a number, aggregate, or totality lacking no part, member, or element

  2. something constituting a complex unity : a coherent system or organization of parts fitting or working together as one

adverb

  1. wholly, entirely

  2. as a complete entity

a whole new age group