sum total
Noun: 1. The complete or final amount resulting from the addition of everything: The sum total is the whole amount, quantity, or number that exists when all parts are combined. It represents the final aggregate or the entirety of something, often used to emphasize the combined effect or significance of all components.
The term "sum total" is used to refer to the final, complete result of adding together all individual parts, elements, or aspects. It often carries a sense of finality or comprehensiveness.
Basic Usage:
- The sum total of my savings is just over a thousand dollars.
- We calculated the sum total of expenses for the entire project.
- The sum total of votes confirmed her victory.
Emphatic or Figurative Usage (to mean "everything there is"):
- For him, the sum total of happiness was a good book and a quiet room.
- Don't let this one mistake be the sum total of your experience here.
- "The sum total of": This is the most common construction. It is used to introduce what is being aggregated.
- The report presents the sum total of our research findings.
- His philosophy can be understood as the sum total of his life experiences.
- Sum (n): The result of adding numbers or quantities together. (e.g., )
- Total (n): The whole number or amount of something. (e.g., )
- Aggregate (n): A whole formed by combining several separate elements. (More formal synonym for "sum total").
- Totality (n): The whole of something. (Emphasizes the state of being complete or entire).
- Grand total: The final total after everything is counted.
- Whole: All of something.
- Entirety: The whole of something.
- Full amount: The complete quantity.
While "sum" and "total" are near-synonyms, the phrase "sum total" is often used for rhetorical emphasis to stress the completeness or finality of the aggregate. It can be used in both literal (mathematical, financial) and figurative contexts to mean "everything taken together." In some cases, it can imply that the combined result is surprisingly small or significant.
- the final aggregate
- the sum of all our troubles did not equal the misery they suffered