to the backbone

English

Prepositional phrase

to the backbone

  1. (idiomatic) Through and through; thoroughly; entirely.
    Synonyms: to the bone, to the core; see also Thesaurus:to the full
    • 1834, Edward Bulwer-Lytton, The Last Days of Pompeii
      staunch to the backbone
    • 1894, Richard William Murray, South African Reminiscences (page 138)
      Sir Culling was an extreme Low Churchman, an Exeter Hallite to the backbone, and the head and front of the Platitudinarian Party.
    • 1907, Alfred Thayer Mahan, From Sail to Steam: Reflections of Naval Life
      In temperament he was Dutch to the backbone at least as we imagine Dutch.
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