| TOTALITY | The whole (of something) |
| ALL | The whole of something (3) |
| BUYUP | Pay to acquire a large amount or the whole of something (3,2) |
| ALLKIEV | The whole of the area, or the population, of the capital of Ukraine (3,4) |
| MALMESBURY | Wiltshire town whose abbey is the burial place of the first king of the whole of England |
| GREATGLEN | The --- ---, a fault valley across the whole of Scotland, extending from the Moray Firth in the East to Loch Linnhe (5,4) |
| PERIMETER | The whole of the outer edge or boundary of an area of land (9) |
| GARBAGEBAG | Refuse container having two parts: The whole of it carries the first part, while the first part carries the second (7,3) |
| CRESCENT | "I saw the _, you saw the whole of the moon", The Waterboys (8) |
| WATERBOYS | The ___, The Whole of the Moon band * (9) |
| ALLSTAR | The whole of the Sun is full of celebrities (3,4) |
| SEE | Part of the diocese, evidently ___ or the whole of it (3) |
| SHALLOT | The slug has consumed the whole of the vegetable (7) |
| GOVERNMENT | "The whole of ___ consists in the art of being honest": Jefferson |
| CAFETERIA | Fast food eatery that's been a part of the whole of the 20th century |
| WEATE | "___ the whole of the toast": Dickens |
| THEWATERBOYS | Mike Scott "The Whole of the Moon" band |
| ALLOT | The whole of the scripture is appropriate |
| RUNTHROUGH | Pervade the whole of the rehearsal? (3-7) |
| UNIVERSAL | Typical of the whole of humankind (9) |