exhibiting or restored to vigorous good health; "hale and hearty"; "whole in mind and body"; "a whole person again"
If you refer to the whole of something, you mean all of it. He has said he will make an apology to the whole of Asia for his country's past behaviour I was cold throughout the whole of my body. the whole of August. Whole is also an adjective. He'd been observing her the whole trip We spent the whole summer in Italy that year. = entire
emphasis You use whole to emphasize what you are saying. It was like seeing a whole different side of somebody His father had helped invent a whole new way of doing business. = totally Whole is also an adjective. That saved me a whole bunch of money