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  1. What's the origin of the phrase 'The whole shebang'? This is an American phrase, from the 1920s. The first question for those of us not living in the USA, and I suspect quite a few that are, is, what’s a shebang?

  2. the whole shebang n: informal ([sth] in its entirety) todo el paquete expr : todo el asunto expr : Rupert has a great life: a high-paying job, a nice car, a beautiful wife--the whole shebang!

  3. The meaning of THE WHOLE SHEBANG is the whole thing : everything that is included in something. How to use the whole shebang in a sentence.

  4. noun. informal uk / ʃɪˈbæŋ / us / ʃəˈbæŋ / the whole shebang. Add to word list. the whole of something, including everything that is connected with it: The wedding's next week, but my parents are taking care of the whole shebang. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Something, anything, nothing, and everything. across-the-board. anything.

  5. In its early years, shebang could refer to such dissimilar things as a type of dwelling, a vehicle, or a drinking establishment, or it could be used in a general sense for the entirety of something, as in the common phrase "the whole shebang."

  6. the whole shebang n: informal ([sth] in its entirety) todo el paquete expr : todo el asunto expr : Rupert has a great life: a high-paying job, a nice car, a beautiful wife--the whole shebang!

  7. 14 de dic. de 2021 · Where did the phrase come from, and why does the expression "the whole shebang" feel so all-encompassing? The answer goes all the way back to the poet Walt Whitman in the 1860s. Whitman, Twain, and a dash of Irish