Whole means all the pieces put together, like when you have a puzzle and it’s finished.
Imagine you have a big chocolate bar that's broken into little squares. If you take just one square, that’s a part of the whole. But if you put all the squares back together, you get the full chocolate bar again, that’s the whole!
Like Building with Blocks
Think about building a tower with blocks. Each block is like a part of the whole tower. If you take one block away, it's not the same tower anymore. But if all the blocks are there, stacked just right, then you have your complete whole, your big, strong tower!
Whole in Real Life
When you eat an apple and it’s completely gone, that’s the whole apple eaten. If you only ate half of it, that was just a part of the whole.
So remember: whenever all the parts are together, that's your whole, whether it's chocolate, blocks, or apples!Whole means all the pieces put together, like when you have a puzzle and it’s finished.
Imagine you have a big chocolate bar that's broken into little squares. If you take just one square, that’s a part of the whole. But if you put all the squares back together, you get the full chocolate bar again, that’s the whole!
Examples
- A child sees a puzzle as whole when all the pieces are together.
- A person feels whole after completing a big task.
- A tree is seen as whole even if it has some broken branches.
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See also
- What are the contributions of the Islamic Golden Age?
- What is reductionism?
- What is naturalism?
- What Is the Role of Philosophy in Modern Science?
- What is internal?