The two-word antonyms in the sentence are "entire" and "part." "Entire" suggests completeness, while "part" indicates a portion or something that is not whole.
He cleaned his room. I cleaned up the mess I made.
We are having the chimney cleaned tomorrow!
Grudgingly, I cleaned my room.
use this sentence: i cleaned the water with my handkerchief
Example sentence - The hoofs of the horse had to be cleaned before putting the shoes on them.
To correct the unclear reference, you must reword the sentence. The sentence isn't clear that the pronoun 'it' refers to the suit or the car. Reworded: Take the suit to be cleaned when you take out the car. Put the suit in the car and take the car to be cleaned.
"Take the suit in the car and have it cleaned." - is understandable. But, "take the suit from (or out of) the car and have it cleaned" is better.
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Example sentence - The words in the book looked blurred until I cleaned my glasses.
The faulty reference in the sentence can be corrected by clarifying what "it" refers to. A suitable rewrite would be: "Take the suit from the car and have the suit cleaned." This eliminates ambiguity and makes it clear that "the suit" is the item to be cleaned.
"The compensation for this is not enough," Mark muttered as he cleaned the toilet.
This luxuriously furnished apartment was recently cleaned.