late 14c., from Old French total (14c.), from Medieval Latin totalis "entire, total" (as in summa totalis "sum total"), from Latin totus "all, all at once, the whole, entire, altogether," a word of unknown origin. Total war is attested from 1937 (William Shirer), in reference to a concept developed in Germany.
total (n.)
"whole amount, sum," 1550s, from total (adj.).
total (v.)
1716, "bring to a total," from total (n.). Intransitive sense "reach a total of" is from 1859. Meaning "to destroy one's car" first recorded 1954. Related: Totaled; totaling.
My son totaled our new car
the rock star totals his guitar at every concert
a total failure
a total disaster
a total eclipse
tosser
tosspot
toss-up
tostada
tot
total
totalitarian
totalitarianism
totality
totally
tote