Jargon is an uncountable noun (specialized technical terminology characteristic of a particular subject): ‘The document was full of legal jargons.’ ‘I don’t understand computer jargon.’
Before the singular form of a countable noun we usually use whole or entire: ‘We spent whole the lesson singing songs.’ ‘The entire document will have to be rewritten.’ Note that sometimes both all and whole/entire are possible: ‘it rained the whole/all the afternoon.’ In these cases, whole/entire provides greater emphasis and often expresses a […]
The main uses of where are:  Question word: Where shall we go?  Relative pronoun: It was not difficult to find the place where the prisoners were hiding.  Subordinating conjunction introducing an adverbial clause of place: Put it where it gets as much sun as possible. For Scientific english editing and Medical Writing […]
A tense formed by will have or shall have followed by the Past participle: She will have worked. Uses: To predict that a future action will be finished by a particular time: Key staff will have completed CC1 and CC2 training by April 1993. To make deductions: Jennifer will have had enough by now. We’re […]