![]() French: ( before a countable noun ) tous les (fr) m pl, toutes les (fr) f pl ( before an uncountable noun ) tout le (fr) m, toute la (fr) f.Esperanto: ĉiuj (eo), ĉiaj (eo), ĉia (eo).Dhivehi: please add this translation if you can.Danish: ( before a countable noun ) alle (da), ( before an uncountable noun ) al (da) c, alt (da) n.Catalan: tot (ca) m, tota (ca) f, tots (ca) pl, totes (ca) f plĬantonese: 所有 ( so 2 jau 5 ) Mandarin.Aragonese: please add this translation if you canĬlassical Syriac: ܟܠ ( koll ) Jewish Aramaic: כּוֹל ( kôl ), כָּל ( kol ).Every individual or anything of the given class, with no exceptions (the noun or noun phrase denoting the class must be plural or uncountable).Homophones: awl, I'll ( some dialects )ĭeterminer In this picture, all of the red shapes are inside the yellow boundary.( cot– caught merger, Inland Northern American ) IPA ( key): /ɑl/.( Received Pronunciation ) enPR: ôl IPA ( key): /ɔːl/.Cognate with West Frisian al ( “ all ” ), Dutch al ( “ all ” ), Scots a' ( “ all ” ), German all ( “ all ” ), Swedish all ( “ all ” ), Norwegian all ( “ all ” ), Icelandic allur ( “ all ” ), Welsh holl ( “ all ” ), Irish uile ( “ all ” ), Lithuanian aliái ( “ all, each, every ” ).ĭialectal sense “all gone” a calque of German alle. From Middle English all, from Old English eall, from Proto-West Germanic *all, from Proto-Germanic *allaz, of uncertain origin but perhaps from Proto-Indo-European *h₂el- ( “ beyond, other ” ).
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