From A to izzard prepositional phrase
Including everything from the start to the end or covering the entire possible scope; thoroughly
A: "Did you do this all by yourself?" B: "Yup, from A to izzard."
John is a careful person. He always tries to make it perfect from A to izzard in anything he does.
I have to redo everything from A to izzard!
After thinking carefully about something for quite some time
To look beyond what is apparent
If something is packed to the gills, it is completely full.
Used to describe the act of scrutinizing something thoroughly.
Do something thoroughly, excellently, or perfectly
This phrase originated from Samuel Johnson's Dictionary of the English Language written in 1755. He used the word 'izzard' to better explain how to pronounce the letter 'z.'
A person who is completely unknown or has no connection with you
The guy I talked to at the prom last night is a perfect stranger.