Entire — total (4)
I believe the answer is:
full
I believe this is a double definition.
'entire' is the first definition.
(I know that entire can be written as full)
'total' is the second definition.
(I know that total can be written as full)
(Other definitions for full that I've seen before include "At maximum capacity" , "Complete; replete" , "Treat cloth; complete" , "Able to eat no more" , "At capacity; rounded" .)