in total - Wiktionary, the free dictionary
From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
Prepositional phrase
[edit]
- Including all aspects of something.
2012 April 22, Sam Sheringham, “Liverpool 0-1 West Brom”, in BBC Sport[1]:
In total, the Reds had 28 shots to their opponent's nine, and 15 corners to the Baggies' three.
2025 February 5, “Network News: NR to cut back vegetation on Heart of Wales line”, in RAIL, number 1028, page 23:
More than 50 trees fell across a ten-mile section of the line during December's Storm Darragh. In total, more than 70 fell on the line, including around 30 which were uprooted.
including all aspects of something
- Chinese:
- Czech: celkem (cs)
- Danish: i alt, sammenlagt, tilsammen, totalt
- Finnish: yhteensä (fi), kaiken kaikkiaan (fi)
- French: en tout (fr), au total (fr)
- German: insgesamt (de), pauschal (de)
- Greenlandic: katillugit
- Japanese: 全部で (ja) (ぜんぶで, zenbu de)
- Korean: 전부 (ko) (jeonbu), 전체로 (ko) (jeonchero), 총 (ko) (chong)
- Malayalam: മൊത്തത്തിൽ (mottattil)
- Persian: جمعاً (fa) (jam'an)
- Polish: w całości
- Russian: итого́ (ru) (itovó), всего́ (ru) (vsevó), в су́мме (v súmme)
- Spanish: en total
- Swedish: sammanlagt (sv), totalt (sv)
- Yiddish: אין גאַנצן (in gantsn)