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Across the board means encompassing everything or everyone.
The "Great" has its origins in the word "Greater" meaning encompassing all of the British Islands rather that meaning "better than".
Covering or encompassing a large span (range) of something, generally of wide open lands or long time.
Yes, "philosophy" is a noun. It refers to the study of fundamental questions about existence, knowledge, values, reason, mind, and language.
Holistic refers to an approach that considers the whole person, including physical, mental, emotional, and social aspects, rather than focusing on individual parts. It emphasizes the interconnectedness of all aspects of a person's well-being.
If you mean just using the word 'encompassing':The word encompassing means to circle or enclose.An example sentence could be:He was encompassing their ideas into one single, foolproof plan.If you mean using both words 'all encompassing':'All encompassing' is a phrase suggesting circling everything, enclosing everything.An example sentence could be:Her unique, all encompassing musical talent enthralled the audience from start to finish.
There is no such term. Existing words are "encompassing" (including) and "all-encompassing" (broad, complete).
1967 (encompassing the end of the 1966 season) 1968 (encompassing the end of the 1967 season) 1969 (encompassing the end of the 1968 season)
No, there isn't. There two encompassing term for crafts.
the meaning of man-made is when a man or any human make the thing
Man's Search for Meaning was created in 1946.