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All

All is a word used to denote the total quantity or extent of something. It functions as a determiner when placed before a noun phrase and as a pronoun when standing alone. In common usage, all can refer to the entirety of a group, mass, or domain, or to the whole of a set of items; it contrasts with some or part.

As an adjective, all is often interchangeable with every in contexts involving plural or mass nouns, though

Etymology traces all to Old English ealle, from Proto-Germanic allaz, related to other Germanic languages, ultimately

See also: universal quantifier, every, whole, totality.

every
is
more
typical
with
singular
count
nouns.
The
phrase
all
of
is
common
before
pronouns
or
noun
phrases,
allowing
emphasis
or
stylistic
variation.
All
can
also
function
with
non-count
nouns:
all
the
water
was
gone.
from
a
Proto-Indo-European
root
meaning
whole
or
entire.
In
philosophy
and
logic,
all
is
associated
with
universal
quantification,
as
in
for
all
x,
P(x),
expressing
statements
that
hold
across
an
entire
domain.
In
everyday
language,
all
carries
scope,
emphasis,
and
sometimes
inclusive
or
exclusive
shades,
and
its
use
may
vary
by
dialect
and
register.