Also,
from A to Z or start to finish or stem to stern . From beginning to end, throughout, as in
We went through the whole agenda, from soup to nuts, or
She had to learn a whole new system from A to Z, or
It rained from start to finish, or
We did over the whole house from stem to stern. The first expression, with its analogy to the first and last courses of a meal, appeared in slightly different forms (such as
from potage to cheese) from the 1500s on; the precise wording here dates only from the mid-1900s. The second expression alludes to the first and last letters of the Roman alphabet; see also
alpha and omega. The third comes from racing and alludes to the entire course of the race; it dates from the mid-1800s. The last variant is nautical, alluding to the front or
stem, and rear or
stern, of a vessel.