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Entire

Entire is an adjective in English meaning “with all parts included; complete or whole.” It is used to emphasize totality, as in phrases like the entire population or the entire process. The word comes from Middle English via Old French entier, ultimately from Latin integer meaning “whole.” The adverb form entirely is related and used to modify verbs or adjectives.

In general usage, entire contrasts with partial or incomplete. It can apply to objects, quantities, periods,

In mathematics, entire has a specialized meaning: an entire function is a complex function that is holomorphic

Overall, entire conveys completeness in ordinary language and designates a global, all-encompassing property in complex analysis,

or
groups,
and
is
common
in
formal
or
careful
speech.
People
also
use
it
to
underline
that
nothing
is
left
out,
as
in
“the
entire
report”
or
“the
entire
country.”
The
word
is
often
followed
by
a
noun
and
precedes
indefinite
determiners
such
as
the
entire
sum
or
the
entire
year.
on
the
entire
complex
plane.
Equivalently,
such
a
function
has
a
convergent
power
series
expansion
about
every
point,
with
infinite
radius
of
convergence.
Entire
functions
include
polynomials,
the
exponential
function
e^z,
sine
and
cosine,
and
many
others.
They
are
analytic
everywhere
in
the
complex
plane,
though
they
can
grow
without
bound.
Foundational
results
such
as
Liouville’s
theorem
show
that
a
bounded
entire
function
must
be
constant,
illustrating
how
global
properties
on
the
complex
plane
constrain
behavior.
distinguishing
it
from
partial
or
local
references.