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all-over

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary
See also: allover and all over

English

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Alternative forms

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Etymology

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From Middle English alover. By surface analysis, all +‎ over.

Adjective

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all-over (not comparable)

  1. Over the whole area or extent.
    • 1939 June, T. R. Perkins, “My Red-Letter Day - II”, in Railway Magazine, page 399:
      Charing Cross station of the old South-Eastern Railway differed much in appearance from that of today, as it had an arched all-over roof, which collapsed some nine years later and was replaced by the present one.
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Translations

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Noun

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all-over (plural all-overs)

  1. A suntan that covers the entire body, as achieved by sunbathing in the nude.

Anagrams

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