Define Entire Meaning

Entire
The whole of something, not one piece, but the complete thing.

"That entire movie was a waste of time."
"not one, not two, but the entire DVD set!"
By Carol-Jean
The Entire World

1. You mean the The Entire World to me and I love you so much!
2. You're the best person out of The Entire World
By Georgena
Entire Equine

"Hey did you hear about that retard entire equine?" "I heard he shot himself in the face after trying to kill his arch rivals Popo, Joesucc, Gibby, Ezmarelda Slash, Smokey Brown, and of course, cars 2!"
By Melita
Whole Entire
Adjective; Whole entire is used to describe/broaden the impact of a certain thing.

By Leticia
Entirely Fraudulent

"The Bible is an entirely fraudulent document, any similarities between characters in this book and real life are purely coincidence and the author takes no responsibility for any similarity"
By Engracia
Record Entire Series
The written equivalent of 'I (or 'you') have no life'. It is derived from the TiVo television recording device. When you have selected a program to record, the machine asks you if you want to 'Record Entire Series'. This choice will provide you with much viewing fodder for months to come. This is a necessary choice for those devoid of options for social interaction.

Person 1: So, what are you doing this Saturday.
Person B: I don't know, rearranging my sock drawer.
Person 1: And that night?
Person B: Reading "The Two Towers", or something on TV.
Person 1: Jesus. Record entire series.
Person B: Yeah, I know. Don't need to rub it in.
By Elnora
Entire World Population
Idiots.....

By Norene
Entirely Worthless
platt and its inhabitants

look at that dump its entirely worthless
By Lissi
Your Entire Shit
A phrase meaning "Everything in your possession" or "Your entire inventory."

Gil: Requesting permission to look through your entire shit!
Admiral: Permission granted.
By Jolynn
Not Entirely Load Bearing
Any plan, concept or idea that is doomed, from the start, to catastrophic failure, usually due to a complete lack of skill and/or knowledge on the part of the planner.

See also "NELB"

Origins:
Bob: Hey John, why are you staring at that wall?

John: I was thinking we could knock it down to make this room bigger.
Bob: But what about the floor upstairs? Won't it fall down? That's a load bearing wall...
John: Well, it's not entirely load bearing.

Usage:
Chip: "Facebook changed again and it sucks!"
Patricia: "Yeah, Facebook's new redesign is not entirely load bearing."
By Shana