complete
When we say something is complete, it’s like finishing a big puzzle. Imagine you have all these little pieces, and when you put them all together, you see a whole picture. If even one piece is missing, the puzzle isn’t complete. So, complete means everything is there, nothing is missing.
Think of baking a cake. You need eggs, flour, sugar, and more. If you have all the ingredients and mix them right, you have a complete cake. But if you forget the sugar, the cake isn’t complete because something important is missing.
Imagine your toy box. When all your toys are inside, your toy box is complete. If a toy is left out, then it’s not complete. Being complete means having everything you need, just like when your toy box is full.
Or, think about a storybook. A story is complete when it has a beginning, middle, and end. If the ending is missing, it’s like a story that’s not finished. So, complete means having all the parts, from start to finish.