Home

geheel

Geheel is a Dutch word that functions as a noun and as an adjective, meaning the whole or the entirety. In ordinary usage it appears in phrases such as het geheel (the entirety), als geheel (as a whole), and in constructions like in zijn geheel or in het geheel beschouwd, where it emphasizes completeness rather than magnitude. The term is used to refer to the complete set, body, or concept under discussion, in contrast with its parts or components.

Etymology and related terms: Geheel derives from Middle Dutch geheel and shares roots with cognate Germanic

Usage in mathematics: In Dutch mathematics, geheel getal is the term for an integer, i.e., a whole

Summary: Geheel centers on the notion of completeness or totality in Dutch, with common uses in everyday

words
for
whole
or
total.
It
is
related
to
the
more
common
adjective
heel,
which
can
mean
whole
in
some
contexts
but
is
also
used
as
an
intensifier
meaning
“very”
in
modern
Dutch.
The
two
forms
appear
in
related
but
distinct
ways
in
Dutch
syntax
and
meaning.
number
that
does
not
include
fractional
parts.
The
phrase
distinguishes
integers
from
rational
numbers,
decimals,
and
fractions.
In
educational
and
formal
contexts,
geheel
is
used
to
stress
the
notion
of
completeness
or
wholeness
of
a
number
set.
language
and
more
specialized
uses
in
mathematics
to
denote
integers.
Its
usage
contrasts
with
parts,
fractions,
or
partial
perspectives,
reinforcing
the
idea
of
the
entire
entity
being
considered.