- to start from the beginning
- начать сначала
Большой англо-русский учебный словарь сочетаемости. Кауль М.Р., Хидекель С.С. 2010.
Большой англо-русский учебный словарь сочетаемости. Кауль М.Р., Хидекель С.С. 2010.
start from scratch — start from the beginning, go back to square one After the flood, we all had to start from scratch to rebuild our lives … English idioms
from the outset — since the start, from the beginning … English contemporary dictionary
from the ground up — {adv. phr.} From the beginning; entirely; completely. * /After the fire they had to rebuild their cabin from the ground up./ * /Sam knows about baseball from the ground up./ * /The new cars have been changed from the ground up./ … Dictionary of American idioms
start from scratch — See: FROM SCRATCH … Dictionary of American idioms
from the ground up — {adv. phr.} From the beginning; entirely; completely. * /After the fire they had to rebuild their cabin from the ground up./ * /Sam knows about baseball from the ground up./ * /The new cars have been changed from the ground up./ … Dictionary of American idioms
start from scratch — See: FROM SCRATCH … Dictionary of American idioms
start from scratch — (figurative) 1. To start at the beginning 2. To embark on (a task, career, etc) without any advantages, experience or without any preparatory work having been done • • • Main Entry: ↑scratch … Useful english dictionary
from the word go — from the beginning, from the start You knew I worked for the KGB. You knew it from the word go … English idioms
from the top — from the boss, from the person in charge; start at the beginning … English contemporary dictionary
from the ground up — From the beginning. ► “In these days of ownership CHURN and affiliation switches, many stations face having to start a newscast from the ground up.” (Broadcasting & Cable, Sept. 4, 1995, p. 31) … American business jargon
from the word “go” — From the beginning. ► “In these days of ownership CHURN and affiliation switches, many stations face having to start a newscast from the ground up.” (Broadcasting & Cable, Sept. 4, 1995, p. 31) … American business jargon