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    total
    /ˈtəʊtl/

    adjective

    noun

    • 1. the whole number or amount of something: "he scored a total of thirty-three points"

    verb

    • 1. amount in number to: "they were left with debts totalling £6,260" Similar add up toamount tomount up tocome to
    • 2. damage (something, typically a vehicle) beyond repair; wreck: informal North American "he almost totalled the car" Similar wreckcrashsmashdestroy

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. the amount or number that you get when several smaller amounts are added together: a total of $20/£1,000/€3m, etc. We calculated all costs to the company and came to a total of $5,500. We employ 534 staff in total. We have a large workforce with women representing 30% of the total.

  3. The meaning of TOTAL is comprising or constituting a whole : entire. How to use total in a sentence. Synonym Discussion of Total.

  4. the amount you get when several smaller amounts are added together: At that time of day, cars with only one occupant accounted for almost 80 percent of the total. A total of 21 horses were entered in the race. We made $1,000 in total, over three days of trading. Thesaurus: synonyms, antonyms, and examples.

  5. A total is the number that you get when you add several numbers together or when you count how many things there are in a group. The companies have a total of 1,776 employees. American English : total / ˈtoʊtəl /

  6. A total is the complete amount or sum. The total on your restaurant bill is the entire amount of money you owe for your meal. A total can also be the entirety of something. The total of your book collection would be all the books you own, and the total of your sports equipment is all the equipment you own.

  7. A total is a whole or complete amount, and "to total" is to add numbers or to destroy something. In math, you total numbers by adding them: the result is the total. If you add 8 and 8, the total is 16.

  8. 1. Of, relating to, or constituting the whole amount; entire: the total population of the city. See Synonyms at whole. 2. Complete; utter; absolute: total concentration; a total effort; a total fool. v. to·taled, to·tal·ing, to·tals or to·talled or to·tal·ling. v.tr. 1. To determine the total of; add up: They totaled the applications at 600. 2.

  9. verb [ T ] uk / ˈtəʊt ə l / us present participle mainly UK totalling | past tense and past participle totalled | present participle US totaling | past tense and past participle totaled. to add up to a particular amount. (Definition of total from the Cambridge Learner's Dictionary © Cambridge University Press)

  10. Definition of total adjective in Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Meaning, pronunciation, picture, example sentences, grammar, usage notes, synonyms and more.

  11. the amount you get when you add several numbers or amounts together; the final number of people or things when they have all been counted. a total of somethingYou got 47 points on the written examination and 18 on the oral, making a total of 65.

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