I didn’t. You’re just incapable of reading what others type.
Sigh
No.
That is what you typed.
From OED:
whole
full; complete
most
used as the superlative of ‘much’, ‘a lot of’, ‘many’
Neither is listed as a synonym for the other.
You can quit pretending now.
No, it actually isn’t. Words don’t change their meaning or definition no matter how much you wish them to.
I’m using words as they actually mean. You are not. I’m pretty sure I’m not the one with an English problem.
What kind of twisted mentality is this?
No actually, I’m not obligated to try and find your sources. I can go to proper ones, widely used by people who speak the English language to find the definition of words in the English language.
Take a nap kiddo, you clearly need it.
you lost NOW!
You also lost then.
Rather obviously.