Omitting no one; proceeding from the door of one house to that of the next.(adjective)
Gnu Collaboartive International Dictionary of English: licensed under The Code Project Open License (CPOL)
Use "house-to-house" in a sentence
"Others are going house-to-house and school-to-school to ensure its success amid concerns that pockets of resistance may emerge."
"The only country it has pronounced loudly on is Libya, where Moammar Gadhafi threatened to go house-to-house to kill civilians who opposed him."
"Back to the Fall of Berlin, the Russians crossed the Oder River (not named after its smell) and entered house-to-house fighting on the streets of Berlin."