from stem to stern

Prepositional phrase

 * 1)  Over the full length of a ship or boat, from the front end of the vessel to the back end.
 * 2)  From front to back; from one end to the other end.
 * 3) * 2005 Oct. 12, Marian Burros, "Take My Steak. Please." (restaurant review), New York Times (retrieved 23 Aug. 2012) :
 * Weighing in at four pounds, the lobster was rubbery and tasteless from stem to stern.
 * 1)  From front to back; from one end to the other end.
 * 2) * 2005 Oct. 12, Marian Burros, "Take My Steak. Please." (restaurant review), New York Times (retrieved 23 Aug. 2012) :
 * Weighing in at four pounds, the lobster was rubbery and tasteless from stem to stern.
 * 1) * 2005 Oct. 12, Marian Burros, "Take My Steak. Please." (restaurant review), New York Times (retrieved 23 Aug. 2012) :
 * Weighing in at four pounds, the lobster was rubbery and tasteless from stem to stern.
 * 1) * 2005 Oct. 12, Marian Burros, "Take My Steak. Please." (restaurant review), New York Times (retrieved 23 Aug. 2012) :
 * Weighing in at four pounds, the lobster was rubbery and tasteless from stem to stern.

Translations

 * Catalan: de popa a proa