From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishall toldall toldTOTALincluding everything or everyone a project costing £10,000, all told → all
Examples from the Corpus
all told• All told, 28 people died and 100 were wounded.• Craig MacTavish retired last season as the last player to compete without a helmet-17 years all told.• He couldn't have bled a great deal, perhaps a cupful all told.• It will take four to six years, all told.• Our 12-day tour, Rome to Sicily, cost us each about $ 1,500, all told.• He said the doctors all told him the injury was going to happen anyway.• It's all told in a bouncy rhyme, with outrageously funny pictures.• They take eighteen hours all told, including the overnight soaking.• There were about twenty of us, all told; mostly McHoans but with a smattering of civilians.all toldall toldTOTALaltogether, when everyone or everything has been counted There must have been eight cars in the accident, all told. → tellExamples from the Corpus
all told• Craig MacTavish retired last season as the last player to compete without a helmet-17 years all told.• He couldn't have bled a great deal, perhaps a cupful all told.• It will take four to six years, all told.• Our 12-day tour, Rome to Sicily, cost us each about $ 1,500, all told.• He said the doctors all told him the injury was going to happen anyway.• It's all told in a bouncy rhyme, with outrageously funny pictures.• They take eighteen hours all told, including the overnight soaking.