Understanding All That in English Grammar
All that stands at the crossroads of determiners, pronouns, and discourse markers, yet most learners encounter it only as a vague intensifier. Its behavior shifts sharply between spoken and written registers, so grasping its mechanics unlocks both fluency and nuance.
We will trace its grammar from word-class membership to pragmatic force, equipping you with rules you can apply instantly.
Etymology and Core Meaning
Old English þæt began as a neuter singular demonstrative. Over centuries it shed inflectional endings and expanded into a complementizer, then into an emphatic determiner.
The modern all that fuses the quantifier all with the relativizer that, creating a hybrid that signals totality plus specification.
Semantic Layers
Layer one: exhaustiveness—every member of a set is included. Layer two: selection—the set itself is narrowed by the clause that follows.
Consider “all that she wrote.” The phrase asserts nothing outside the specified writing counts, and nothing inside is omitted.
Determiner vs. Pronoun Roles
As a determiner, all that precedes a noun phrase and forces a restrictive relative clause: “all that money can buy.”
As a pronoun, it stands alone: “All that remains is hope.”
The switch is syntactic yet invisible to many learners because the surface string looks identical.
Ellipsis Patterns
When the noun is recoverable, speakers drop it: “I’ve tasted all that (wine) before.”
Such ellipsis relies on immediate context, so misreading it leads to vagueness.
Clause Types Introduced
All that licenses only restrictive relative clauses. Non-restrictive commas render the structure ungrammatical: *“all that, he said, was lost.”
The clause must contain a gap corresponding to the relativized element; resumptive pronouns are banned: *“all that he said it.”
Comparative Correlatives
All that can open correlative pairs: “all that glitters is not gold.”
Here, the first clause sets a domain; the second denies universal inclusion.
Register and Frequency Data
Corpus studies show all that peaks in academic prose for determiner use and in fiction for pronoun use. Conversation favors the reduced form all th’ or even the eye dialect all dat in informal writing.
Avoid the latter in formal registers; spell the full phrase to maintain credibility.
Collocational Clusters
Top lexical collocates include “matters,” “remains,” “glitters,” and “counts.” These nouns share an abstract, evaluative quality, hinting at semantic preference.
Pairing “all that” with concrete count nouns like “all that apples” sounds odd because the noun must be mass or abstract to collocate naturally.
Negation and Polarity Sensitivity
All that triggers negative polarity items: “all that he ever wanted.”
It resists negation directly: *“not all that he wanted” reads as partial denial, not clause negation.
Instead, shift the negation to the predicate: “all that he wanted was not available.”
Interrogative Transformations
Fronting yields marginal results: *“What all that he wanted?” is ungrammatical.
Embed the clause: “Can you tell me all that he wanted?”
Complementation Patterns
All that can be followed by finite or non-finite clauses. Finite: “all that you say is true.”
Non-finite: “all that remains to do is sign.”
The infinitive marks prospective action, tightening the temporal frame.
Gerund vs. Infinitive
“All that needs doing” uses a gerund to stress the task’s generality.
“All that remains to do” uses the infinitive to spotlight the final step.
Information Structure Focus
By fronting all that clauses, speakers create cleft-like emphasis: “All that I ask is a little patience.”
The rheme “a little patience” gains end-focus, increasing persuasive weight.
Extraposition Strategies
Heavy clauses can extrapose: “It is all that we have ever dreamt of.”
This eases parsing and places stress on the noun phrase dreamt.
Lexical Bundles and Idioms
Fixed bundles include “all that kind of thing,” “all that jazz,” and “all that sort of stuff.” These chunks act as vague category extenders.
Use them sparingly in formal prose; replace with precise lists when clarity outweighs voice.
Metaphorical Extensions
“All that and a bag of chips” satirizes excess praise. The idiom relies on all that as a benchmark, then inflates it absurdly.
Recognizing such play keeps learners attuned to irony.
Cross-Linguistic Equivalents
German uses alles, was; French uses tout ce qui/que. Both mirror the restrictive clause, yet English alone fuses all and that without agreement markers.
This structural simplicity causes L1 interference when learners omit that in their own languages.
Translation Pitfalls
Translating tout ce que j’ai as “all what I have” yields an error. The correct form is “all that I have.”
Drill learners on dropping what in favor of that.
Acquisition Order Insights
Children master all that as a determiner around age five, but the pronoun usage emerges later, tied to literacy.
Explicit instruction accelerates the pronoun stage through sentence-combining tasks.
Error Analysis Snapshot
Common error: “all what he said.”
Remediation: replace what with that and highlight the restrictive function.
Pragmatic Strengthening
All that can intensify scalar implicatures: “He isn’t all that smart.” Here it downgrades the adjective’s degree.
The same phrase in “all that smart students need” upgrades it, showing context reversibility.
Conversational Implicatures
Speaker A: “Was the test hard?” Speaker B: “Not all that hard.”
B’s reply implies the test was manageable, not easy, steering the scalar midpoint downward.
Teaching Strategies
Use concordance lines to let learners notice clause boundaries. Highlight the obligatory gap and restrictive nature.
Follow with gapped dictations: “All that ___ said was ignored.” Learners supply the missing pronoun.
Production Drills
Sentence expansion: give “She kept the letters.” Expand to “All that she kept were the letters.”
Then vary tense: “All that she had kept were the letters.”
Advanced Stylistics
In literary prose, all that often opens rhythmic triplets: “All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream.”
Poe exploits the phrase’s weight to slow tempo and elevate diction.
Sound Patterning
The dental /ð/ of that followed by stop /t/ creates internal rhyme with at, adding phonetic cohesion.
Poets exploit this for slant rhyme effects.
Digital Age Variants
Online, all that mutates into memetic “all dat” or sarcastic “all teh thingz.” These spellings signal playful register shift.
Recognize the cues to avoid misjudging tone in asynchronous chat.
Emoji Cohesion
Pairing all that with 😂 intensifies mockery: “He’s all that smart 😂.”
The emoji replaces prosodic cues lost in text.
Assessment Rubrics
Rate learners on clause restrictiveness, collocational accuracy, and register appropriateness. Assign separate bands for determiner and pronoun functions.
Require them to convert spoken transcripts into academic prose, excising informal variants.
Peer Feedback Scripts
Provide sentence stems: “Replace all what with ___.” “Flag any non-restrictive commas after all that.”
This scaffolds focused correction.
Corpus Exercise Pack
Task one: search COCA for “all that [v*]” and list top five verbs. Task two: categorize each verb as mental, material, or relational.
Task three: write five original sentences using the least common verb to stretch productive range.
Diachronic Tracking
Compare COHA from 1810 to 2000; notice a steady rise in pronoun use paralleling abstract-noun frequency.
Graph the trend and speculate on socio-cultural drivers such as Romantic individualism.
Critical Discourse Angle
All that can package ideology: “all that the free market demands.” The phrase naturalizes the market’s requirements as inevitable.
Teach students to question what totality is being constructed.
Framing Devices
Headlines use all that to compress policy critique: “All that stands between us and disaster.”
The ellipsis invites fear while omitting specifics.