all

Etymology
From, from , from , from , of uncertain origin but perhaps from. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

The dialectal sense “all gone” is a. The use in etc. also has equivalents in German (see ).

Determiner



 * 1) Every individual or anything of the given class, with no exceptions (the noun or noun phrase denoting the class must be plural or uncountable).
 * 2) Throughout the whole of (a stated period of time; generally used with units of a day or longer).
 * (= through the whole of the day and the whole of the night.)
 * (= from the beginning of the year until now.)
 * 1) Only; alone; nothing but.
 * 2)  Any.
 * 1) Throughout the whole of (a stated period of time; generally used with units of a day or longer).
 * (= through the whole of the day and the whole of the night.)
 * (= from the beginning of the year until now.)
 * 1) Only; alone; nothing but.
 * 2)  Any.
 * 1) Only; alone; nothing but.
 * 2)  Any.
 * 1)  Any.
 * 1)  Any.

Translations

 * Breton:
 * Bulgarian:
 * Gothic:
 * Guaraní:
 * Gujarati: ,
 * Indonesian:, , ,
 * Interlingua: ,
 * Kurdish:
 * Northern Kurdish:, , , , , , ,
 * Old High German:
 * Old Saxon:
 * Persian:
 * Tupinambá: ,
 * Turkish: ,
 * Vietnamese:

Pronoun

 * 1) Everything.
 * 2) Everyone.
 * 3) The only thing(s).
 * All that was left was a small pile of ash.
 * 1) * 1904 October 10, Shea v. Nilima, [US] Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, in 1905, Reports Containing the Cases Determined in All the Circuits from the Organization of the Courts, page 266:
 * Q. Now, then, when you started to go to stake the claims, who all went along?
 * A. I and Johan Peter Johansen, Otto Greiner, and Thorulf Kjelsberg.
 * 1) The only thing(s).
 * All that was left was a small pile of ash.
 * 1) * 1904 October 10, Shea v. Nilima, [US] Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, in 1905, Reports Containing the Cases Determined in All the Circuits from the Organization of the Courts, page 266:
 * Q. Now, then, when you started to go to stake the claims, who all went along?
 * A. I and Johan Peter Johansen, Otto Greiner, and Thorulf Kjelsberg.
 * 1) * 1904 October 10, Shea v. Nilima, [US] Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, in 1905, Reports Containing the Cases Determined in All the Circuits from the Organization of the Courts, page 266:
 * Q. Now, then, when you started to go to stake the claims, who all went along?
 * A. I and Johan Peter Johansen, Otto Greiner, and Thorulf Kjelsberg.
 * A. I and Johan Peter Johansen, Otto Greiner, and Thorulf Kjelsberg.

Adverb

 * 1)  Wholly; entirely; completely; totally.
 * 2) Apiece; each.
 * The score was 30 all when the rain delay started.
 * 1)  So much.
 * Don't want to go? All the better since I lost the tickets.
 * 1)  Even; just.
 * She was all, “Whatever.”
 * Don't want to go? All the better since I lost the tickets.
 * 1)  Even; just.
 * She was all, “Whatever.”
 * She was all, “Whatever.”
 * She was all, “Whatever.”
 * She was all, “Whatever.”

Translations

 * Central Kurdish:
 * Macedonian: ,
 * Norwegian:
 * Slovene:
 * Thai:
 * Turkish:

Noun

 * 1)  Everything that one is capable of.
 * 2)  The totality of one's possessions.
 * 3) * Folio Society 1973, pp. 37-8:
 * "en"
 * "en"

- she therefore ordered Jenny to pack up her alls and begone, for that she was determined she should not sleep that night within her walls. I packed up my little all as well as I could, and went off.


 * 1) Everything in general; all that matters.

Conjunction

 * 1)  Although.

Adjective

 * 1)  All gone; dead.

Etymology
From.

Adjective

 * 1) of glowing, reddish color

Etymology
See

Adjective

 * 1) other

Etymology
. Compare 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Noun

 * 1) garlic
 * 2) garlic clove

Etymology
From.

Postposition

 * 1) under, below (Governs the genitive)

Etymology
From, from , from , from. Cognate with 🇨🇬.

Determiner

 * 1) all
 * 2) * 1843, Karl Ludwig Kannegießer (translation from Italian into German), Die göttliche Komödie des Dante Alighieri, 4th edition, 1st part, Leipzig, p. 84:
 * "de"
 * 1) * 1843, Karl Ludwig Kannegießer (translation from Italian into German), Die göttliche Komödie des Dante Alighieri, 4th edition, 1st part, Leipzig, p. 84:
 * "de"

- ... / Nachdem, von Wuth und Grausamkeit entbronnen, / Der Weiberschwarm die Männer all erschlug.


 * 1) every in time intervals, with plural noun

Usage notes

 * The bare form  is used with articles and pronouns, which it precedes (as in English). For instance: ; ; . Colloquial German often uses the adjective  instead:.
 * If  is followed by an adjective, the adjective is declined weakly: ,

Etymology
From and.

Pronoun

 * 1)  all
 * 2)  every; each

Usage notes

 * The word is usually uninflected, except for the dative plural, which becomes.

Etymology
From, from , from.

Adverb

 * 1)  (entirely, completely)

Determiner

 * , every

Etymology
From.

Etymology
From, from , from. Cognate with 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬 and 🇨🇬. Akin to 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1)  everybody
 * 2) over, at an end, finished
 * 3) tired, exhausted, worn out; weak
 * 4) dead
 * 1) tired, exhausted, worn out; weak
 * 2) dead
 * 1) dead
 * 1) dead

Etymology
From and. Compare 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬, 🇨🇬.

Adjective

 * 1) all

Etymology
From, from , from , from.

Usage notes
All (with inflections) is used with mass nouns. The corresponding for nouns with ordinary plural is.

A masculine-looking form is virtually only retained in the fixed expressions  and.