stern

from stem to stern

Completely or entirely, as from one end to the other. The stem is the front part of a ship and the stern is the rear. If that guy so much as looks at me the wrong way, I'll cut him from stem to stern, I swear! When I had the flu, I honestly ached from stem to stern and couldn't get out of bed for days.
See also: stem, stern

stem to stern

Completely or entirely, as from one end to the other. The stem and the stern are opposite ends of a ship. If that guy so much as looks at me the wrong way, I'll cut him from stem to stern, I swear! When I had the flu, I honestly ached from stem to stern and couldn't get out of bed for days.
See also: stem, stern
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

from stem to stern

 
1. Lit. from the front of a boat or ship to the back. He inspected the boat from stem to stern and decided he wanted to buy it.
2. Fig. from one end to another. Now, I have to clean the house from stem to stern. I polished my car carefully from stem to stern.
See also: stem, stern
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

from soup to nuts

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.
See also: nuts, soup

stem to stern

see under from soup to nuts.
See also: stem, stern
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.

from soup to nuts

from beginning to end; completely. North American informal
Soup is likely to feature as the first course of a formal meal, while a selection of nuts may be offered as the final one.
See also: nuts, soup

from stem to stern

from the front to the back, especially of a ship.
See also: stem, stern
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

from ˌsoup to ˈnuts

(American English, informal) from beginning to end: She told me the whole story from soup to nuts.
This refers to a long meal that often begins with soup and ends with nuts.
See also: nuts, soup

from ˌstem to ˈstern

all the way from the front of a ship to the back: It was a small boat, less than thirty feet from stem to stern.
See also: stem, stern
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary

stern

n. the posterior; buttocks. The little airplane crashed right into the stern of an enormous lady who didn’t even notice.
McGraw-Hill's Dictionary of American Slang and Colloquial Expressions

from stem to stern

From one end to another.
See also: stem, stern
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition.

from soup to nuts

From the beginning to the end; the whole thing. The analogy to a complete meal of numerous courses dates back many years. John Heywood’s proverb collection of 1546 has it “from potage to cheese,” and John Clarke’s 1639 collection, “from th’egges to th’apples.” The precise locution of soup to nuts appears to be American and dates only from the early twentieth century. A very similar cliché, from start to finish, comes from sports, particularly rowing races. The earliest example in print, according to the OED, dates from a sports publication of 1868. This cliché is more common in Britain, where finish is used as a noun more often than it is in America. See also alpha and omega; from the word go.
See also: nuts, soup

stem to stern, from

From beginning to end; entirely. In nautical terminology the stem is an upright at the bow (front) of a vessel and the stern is the back end. This counterpart of from head to toe and from soup to nuts was quoted by the Roman writer Cicero as a Greek proverb. In English the term was used literally from about 1600 on, and figuratively soon afterward.
See also: stem
The Dictionary of Clichés by Christine Ammer
See also:
  • from stem to stern
  • stem
  • stem to stern, from
  • stem to stern
  • be bringing up the rear
  • at the rear of
  • rear
  • rear end
  • aft
  • fore and aft
References in periodicals archive
On "(https://canoe.com/entertainment/celebrity/howard-stern-slams-simon-cowell-as-sleazebag-and-liar) The Stern Show " Wednesday morning, Stern lambasted Cowell and wished him ill.
This rehabilitation of his image was also helped by his stint as a judge on 'America's Got Talent,' which Stern explains in the book really changed how people saw him.
HOWARD STERN COMES AGAIN will be released by Simon & Schuster on 14 May 2019.
In an interview with The Associated Press on Friday, Stern said he established a yearslong dialogue with Schoep and convinced the former leader to transfer the organization to him when Schoep said he planned to disband it.
??Support services provider Precision Medicine Group, Inc., serving drug development companies, has announced it has acquired healthcare-focussed investor relations firm Stern Investor Relations, Inc.
Inside the new Stern Marketing Academy students will learn:
The Stern Defense magazine adapter is designed to position pistol magazines inside standard .223/5.56 AR mag wells so they properly feed into your PCC upper.
Galaxy Love by Gerald Stern WW Norton, 2017,124 pages
Stern Options claim to trade from addresses in Scotland but the Financial Conduct Authority have warned they are based in Bulgaria, which means they aren't regulated in the UK.
Carnie Wilson is now speaking out against Howard Stern's propensity to fat-shame.
Celebrated poet Gerald Stern delivers this series of essays ruminating on his rich and storied past while meditating on the inevitable conclusion to his life that awaits.
by Nicholas Stern. Cambridge, MA: The MIT Press, 2015, 448 pp.
Stern Pinball, Inc., headquartered just outside Chicago, Illinois, is a producer of arcade-quality pinball games.
Grete Stern and Horacio Coppola are not household names in photo history, but an exhibition of their work from the 1920s through the '50s at the Museum of Modern Art, on view through October 4, demonstrates that they should be.