In every part or aspect, throughout. For example, I was wet through and through, or He was a success through and through. This idiom originally was used to indicate literally penetration, as by a sword. The figurative usage was first recorded in 1410.
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Through and through describes a situation where an object, real or imaginary, passes completely through another object, also real or imaginary. The phrase has several common uses:
An image may be through and through in the following cases:
Through and through images are more durable; they do not easily wear off.
In the case that the image can be viewed from the other side, we see the mirror image, just like in the case of a transparent image, such as a drawing on a transparent sheet.
A sheet with a through and through image is achiral. We can distinguish two cases:
Through and through is also used in forensics to describe a bullet that has passed through a body, leaving both entry and exit wounds.
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