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  1. Most people use it to mean ‘in every possible way, with every alternative examined’, as in “we checked him out six ways to Sunday before offering him that big loan”. Others mean ‘in every possible direction’, as in “my necklace broke and the beads went six ways to Sunday”.

  2. May 23, 2024 · Applying a logical meaning to six ways to Sunday is simple. In terms of the calendar, there are six days after Sunday, or six days before Sunday, depending on the perspective. The phrase points out the inevitability of reaching Sunday, no matter what day serves as starting point.

  3. Mar 5, 1999 · Six Ways to Sunday: Directed by Adam Bernstein. With Norman Reedus, Debbie Harry, Adrien Brody, Paul D'Amato. Eighteen-year-old mothers' son Harry (he lives with his overprotective mother Kate) shows his cruel side at one occasion and is hired as hitman/enforcer by the Jewish mob.

  4. Six Ways to Sunday is a 1997 American crime drama film with elements of comedy directed by Adam Bernstein. It is based on Charles Perry's novel Portrait of a Young Man Drowning.

  5. Sep 8, 2022 · "Six ways to Sunday" is the most common use of this phrase, which typically means "thoroughly", or (having considered) "all possible ways", and can also mean "in every direction" or even "as often as possible".

  6. The phrase “six ways to Sunday” is a common idiom used in English language. It refers to something that has been done thoroughly or exhaustively, leaving no room for doubt or uncertainty. The origins of this idiom can be traced back to the early 20th century when it was first used in American English.

  7. The idiom six ways from Sunday means in every way possible, having done something completely, having addressed every alternative. Six ways from Sunday seems to have its origins in the middle eighteenth century as the phrases both ways from Sunday and two ways from Sunday.

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