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The phrase "always whole" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used to describe something that is consistently complete or intact, often in a philosophical or emotional context.
Example: "In times of uncertainty, I find comfort in the belief that love is always whole, never truly diminished."
Alternatives: "always complete" or "forever intact".
Exact(6)
Barbecue wasn't always whole hog and pork shoulders in North Carolina and beef brisket in Texas.
The G2x is a mighty fine phone, and one we'd almost always whole heartedly recommend to our friends looking to jump into the Android world.
We are always whole in His presence.
But we're always whole because there is no other way God sees us.
The mystery is that while we are broken at times on the surface, we are always whole somewhere in the depth of our being.
Lock combinations are always whole numbers.
Similar(54)
Buckwheat groats, oat groats and rolled oats are always whole-grain, as are wheat and rye berries.
Through repeated application of this method, the values of the electric charge on individual oil drops are always whole-number multiples of a lowest value that value being the elementary electric charge itself (about 1.602 10−19 coulomb).
After all, already Theophilus thought that even though everything is composed of monads, "there is never an infinite whole in the world, though there are always wholes greater than others ad infinitum" (Leibniz, New Essays, I-xiii-21).
It was always the whole idea, because we knew that the equation for us would include whole-animal butchery.
And there isn't always a whole lot of guidance.
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Since I tried Ludwig back in 2017, I have been constantly using it in both editing and translation. Ever since, I suggest it to my translators at ProSciEditing.

Justyna Jupowicz-Kozak
CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com