The Collaborative International Dictionary
Allthing \All`thing`\, adv. [For in all (= every) thing.]
Altogether. [Obs.]
--Shak.
Usage examples of "allthing".
He asked them whether they believed such an allthing, a perfectly ordered mind, could exist.
They will see you, versions of you, if you meet the allthing," Plass said.
If we don't agree to do something, the allthing will get us soon anyway, and then we'll be planted out there .
She claimed we couldn't do anything out there but be taken in by the allthing, anyway .
Olmy was not yet sure he believed in the allthing, but what had happened in the garden, and in the rest of the Night Land, made any disagreement moot.
Had the allthing learned this method of communication after its time in the Way?
The allthing had applied similar awkward tools to both, either to unify them into its being, or to find some new way to experience their otherness.
The allthing, if such existed, had flung him along this valley of waste and failure, another piece of detritus, even more frustrating than most.
He did manage to get them to hold a gathering of barons called the Allthing once a year, though, to vote on the laws and judge disputes, so the kings became scarcely more powerful than any other lord.
Thus in Iceland, and in other Scandinavian lands, at every Allthing, or national folkmote, a lovsogmathr used to recite the whole law from memory for the enlightening of the assembly.
There has to be a ruler, a council of councils, an Allthing, a Parliament, a committee of the wealthy and powerful, a hierarchy of priests-something!