from scratch
Học thuậtThân thiện
Definition
Adverb 1. From the beginning, especially without relying on resources or other advantages: This phrase describes starting a process or creating something from the very first step, using only basic or raw materials, without using any pre-made components or benefiting from a pre-existing foundation.
Usage
The phrase "from scratch" is used to emphasize that something was started or made completely from the beginning, without shortcuts. It often implies effort, self-reliance, and a lack of pre-assembled aids. - It typically follows verbs like make, build, start, create, learn, or cook. - It is commonly used in contexts like cooking, business, education, and construction.
Examples
- Cooking/Baking:
- I prefer to make pasta sauce from scratch rather than using a jar.
- The recipe requires you to make the pastry from scratch.
- Business/Projects:
- They built their successful company from scratch with just a small loan.
- We had to design the software from scratch because no existing solution fit our needs.
- Learning/Skills:
- After the accident, he had to learn to walk again from scratch.
- I'm studying French from scratch; I don't know a single word yet.
Advanced Usage
- "Start from scratch": This is a very common collocation meaning to abandon previous work and begin again from the very beginning.
- After the computer crashed, I lost all my data and had to start from scratch.
- Used to highlight purity, originality, or a fundamental approach.
- The artist creates her own paints from scratch, grinding the pigments herself.
Variants and Related Words
- From the ground up: (idiom) Very similar in meaning to "from scratch," often used for building or creating complex structures like businesses or systems.
- He built his empire from the ground up.
- From square one: (idiom) Meaning from the very beginning, often after a failure or setback.
- The plan failed, so we had to go back to square one.
Synonyms
- From the beginning
- From nothing
- Ab initio (formal, Latin origin)
- De novo (formal, Latin origin, used in scientific and legal contexts)
Related Idioms
- Make something out of nothing: To create something valuable without having any resources to start with. This emphasizes the result more than the process.
- She's an amazing chef who can make a meal out of nothing.
- Bootstrap: (verb) To start and develop something (especially a business) with minimal resources. Often used as "bootstrapped."
- It was a bootstrapped startup, funded entirely by the founders' savings.
Adverb
- from the beginning, especially without relying on resources or other advantages
- he baked the torte from scratch
- she built her business up from scratch