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单词 beyond
释义
beyond1 preposition, adverbbeyond2 noun
beyondbe‧yond1 /bɪˈjɒnd $ -ˈjɑːnd/ ●●● S2 W1 preposition, adverb Word Origin
WORD ORIGINbeyond1
Origin:
Old English begeondan, from geondan ‘beyond’, from geond; YONDER
Examples
EXAMPLES FROM OTHER DICTIONARIES
  • an apple just beyond my reach
  • continuing to work beyond retirement age
  • I can't really tell you anything beyond what you know already.
  • Santa Fe doesn't have much industry beyond tourism.
  • That topic is somewhat beyond the scope of this discussion.
  • The administration deserves no blame for events beyond its control.
  • The ban on hunting these animals has been extended beyond 2001.
  • The park is a couple of streets beyond the school.
  • The rate of inflation has risen beyond 5%.
Thesaurus
Longman Language Activatorwhen something is definitely true
use this to emphasize that something is definitely true. Definitely is more common in spoken English than certainly: · Incredible as they seem, these events certainly took place.· We don't know exactly when the house was built, but it's certainly over 200 years old. · I definitely posted the cheque last week, so it should have arrived by now.· "I think it would be a great opportunity." "Yeah, definitely."definitely/certainly not: · "She's not thinking of going back out with Simon again?" "No, definitely not."
use this to say that, in your opinion, something is definitely true about someone or something: · The years my parents spent in Kenya were undoubtedly the happiest of their lives.· Japan has unquestionably one of the most successful economies in the world.· Without a doubt, taxation is going to be the key issue in the President's campaign.
use this to say that, in your opinion, something definitely is true about someone or something: there's no doubt/there's no question that: · There's no doubt that he completely dominates her.· There is no question that Maridan had known all about the deal.· There was no doubt that, without the peacekeeping force, the civil war would have continued.there's no doubt/there's no question about it/about that: · You can see they're short of staff -- there's no doubt about it.· "We made some mistakes. No question about that," Glavine said.
use this to say that, in your opinion, there is definitely no doubt at all that something is true: · The evidence proves, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that this man was in the victim's apartment on the day of the murder.
spoken say this when you want to emphasize that something must be true and you want the person you are talking to to agree with you: · Surely he must have realized that the money was stolen.· "I'm not sure how the heating system works." "Surely it can't be that complicated." · Your car must be worth more than $500, surely!
if something is beyond dispute it certainly happened or exists and no one thinks differently: · Her professionalism is beyond dispute.· That the reports were stolen is beyond dispute. What we need to know is who took them.
more than a number, amount, age etc
more than a number or amount: more than: · I've been working here for more than fifteen years.· More than 50,000 people attended the concert, which was held in Central Park.much more/far more/a lot more/even more: · Rented accommodation costs much more in New York.· Sales executives earn about $200,000 a year, and those higher up the ladder can earn a lot more.no more than/not more than: · The discussion lasted no more than 30 minutes.10/100/$50 etc more: · It's a better hotel, but it costs about £50 more than the other one.or more: · He could receive a prison sentence of five years or more.
more than that number or amount - use this especially when it is not important to say exactly how much more: · I had to wait over half an hour for the train this morning.· We receive over 2,000 applications a year.· It's hot out there - I'd say it's over 90.just over (=slightly over): · She weighs just over 180 pounds.well over/way over (=a lot more) informal: · Well over 30 schools took part in the fund-raising walk.· She was driving way over the speed limit.3/10/12 etc and over (=including and over a particular age): · NCI recommends that women aged 40 years and over are checked every two years.
more than a number or level on a scale that can be exactly measured: · The temperature is about 2 degrees above zero.just above (=slightly above): · High speed trains average just above 150 mph.well/way above (=a lot more) informal: · The government promised to increase teachers' pay well above the rate of inflation.above average (=more than usual): · All the students in the group were found to have above average IQ scores.3/10/12 etc and above (=including and above a particular figure): · A score of 70 and above indicates good spatial and map-reading skills.
formal more than a particular number or amount, especially a number: · Scientists have discovered eight craters on Venus with diameters greater than 100 km.· Imagine a device that could send a signal at a speed greater than the speed of light. be greater than: · Economic growth this year is predicted to be greater than 1.5%.be much/far/even greater than: · By the 1940s, the volume of domestic trade was much greater than trade with other countries.
more than another number, amount, age etc - use this especially when the other number etc is a particular level or limit: · Inflation has now risen beyond the acceptable level of 5%.· In a number of professions, it is possible to continue working beyond retirement age.
formal more than an amount or number - used especially in official documents, instructions, or reports: · The cyclone was travelling at speeds in excess of 21 mph.be in excess of: · The population is now estimated to be in excess of 40 million.well in excess of (=a lot more) informal: · The fire has caused well in excess of $500,000 worth of damage.
also upward of American use this when the number or amount you mention is the lower limit, and there is possibly even more than that: · The Reynolds collection is valued at upward of $20 million. 10/$300/5 years etc and upwards: · The performance is suitable for children of 7 years and upwards.
: 10/100/1,500 etc plus at least 10, 100 etc and more than that: · The drugs have a street value of $30,000 plus.· It took me three hours to back up the computer's 400-plus megabyte memory.
difficult to recognize
a strange person, voice, smell etc one that is not recognizable because it is different from other, similar things that you know already: · I could hear strange voices outside the room.· It was hard for her, going to live in a strange city where she knew no-one.· Mum, come quick! There's a strange man coming up the path.· Can you check out that strange noise outside?
also unrecognisable British difficult or impossible to recognize: · We've recovered two bodies from the wreckage, but they are unrecognizable.· The explosion left nothing but small, unrecognizable pieces of the aircraft scattered over the field.unrecognizable to: · Completely shaved and wearing prison clothes, the two sisters were unrecognizable to each other.
something that is unfamiliar is not recognizable because you have never seen it, heard it, done it etc before: · She spoke with an unfamiliar accent.· She noticed an unfamiliar truck parked across the street. unfamiliar to: · His name may be unfamiliar to Western audiences.
also out of all recognition if something has changed beyond recognition or out of all recognition , it has changed completely -- use this to emphasize that it is completely different now: · The business has changed beyond recognition since Cyril took over from his father.· The Internet has altered our understanding of the world beyond all recognition.· Susan's playing has improved out of all recognition.
Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE ENTRY
 Such tasks are far beyond the scope of the average schoolkid.
(=impossible to repair, control, believe etc) Scott’s equipment was damaged beyond repair. The town centre had changed beyond all recognition. Due to circumstances beyond our control, the performance has had to be cancelled.
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
 medals awarded for bravery above and beyond the call of duty (=greater than it is your duty to show)
 The humor in the movie sometimes goes beyond the bounds of good taste.
(=be possible/not possible) It was not beyond the bounds of possibility that they could meet again.
 I can speak French, but simultaneous translation is beyond my capabilities (=too difficult).
· Occasionally flights are cancelled due to circumstances beyond our control.
 Why you let her talk you into doing such a foolish thing is beyond my comprehension (=impossible for me to understand).
(=better or more than you ever hoped for)· Suddenly he was wealthy beyond his wildest dreams.
(=more than you have to do as part of your job)· She's a doctor who has gone beyond the call of duty in her care for her patients.
 She was pushed beyond her powers of endurance.
(=greater or better than someone expected)· The task took two months to complete, but it was successful far beyond all expectations.
(=be definite)· Her loyalty is beyond question.
(=be so badly damaged that it cannot be repaired)· Unfortunately the engine is beyond repair.
(=be so honest that you are never thought to have done something wrong)· He regarded his friend Henry as being above suspicion.
 It’s surely not beyond the wit of man to come up with a solution.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM THE ENTRY
  • Calculus was always beyond me.
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • His early comedies might have been taken to represent an unheard-of civility from the back of beyond.
  • Larky jaunts to the back of beyond returned to fashion with the 1980s boom in travel writing.
  • Whatever anyone says about muggings and suchlike up here, there'd be no one about at all in the back of beyond.
  • And the saluting was beyond belief.
  • Did I just frighten you beyond belief?
  • I think this is idolatry beyond belief.
  • She was tired, tired beyond belief.
  • The media are dull beyond belief because of the heavy censorship.
  • These proposals are ridiculous beyond belief.
  • They have been slashed and burned and damaged beyond belief.
  • What Clemens did next was almost beyond belief.
  • The dancing in the show had a beauty that was beyond compare.
  • She went to her chamber and used every art she knew to make herself beautiful beyond compare.
  • The Muses had no instrument peculiar to them, but their voices were lovely beyond compare.
  • Their written language was the most advanced of the pre-Columbian scripts, and their astronomical knowledge beyond compare.
be beyond/past description
  • Ellen's honesty is beyond dispute.
  • Her professionalism is beyond dispute.
  • That the reports were stolen is beyond dispute. What we need to know is who took them.
  • That the Emperor did not want war is beyond dispute, for the evidence from all sides makes this clear.
  • Besides, we knew beyond doubt that she loved us dearly.
  • I think it unlikely that there is any further evidence which would put the question beyond doubt.
  • It felt as if he could see right inside her head so that he knew beyond doubt the minutest detail of her response.
  • It is beyond doubt that lawmaking was a power to be shared by both Houses and the President...
  • The episode illustrates beyond doubt that the majority voting rules of the Treaty of Rome have teeth.
  • The last sentence takes it as established beyond doubt that the inherent bias in analysis is against issuing regulations.
  • The latter, particularly, is not beyond doubt, but that does not destroy the value of his what-if speculations.
  • You will be so learned, so well prepared, that your future as a musician will be beyond doubt.
  • It may be tempting to describe urban centers in the developing world as almost beyond hope.
  • The condition of Tam's leather jacket had got beyond a joke.
  • Moreover, both the biblical and the scientific accounts deal imaginatively with mysteries beyond our ken.
  • Obviously they can not weigh up the comparative cost of some type of credit which is beyond their ken.
  • Out of our hands and beyond our ken.
  • Burton and his wife had suffered beyond measure.
  • Detesting the faults beyond measure which nature has given to women, he resolved never to marry.
  • It originates in childhood when anyone under ten is adored beyond measure.
  • It puzzled him beyond measure that the boy should have stumbled upon this private area.
  • That notion, too, disturbed him beyond measure.
  • The book was widely translated and copied in the ancient world and was influential beyond measure.
  • The City's ability to keep a secret appears to have improved beyond measure over the past two years.
  • The quarterback is the Herschel Walker of his generation, gifted beyond measure, with skills that astonish and results that disappoint.
  • There was something about the wizard that irked Him beyond measure.
  • It is to risk leaving out what religion is really about, rather like music without sound, or mathematics without numbers.
  • The potential applications are almost without number.
  • They forgot the message times without number.
  • Zbigniew Shapira, not yet thirty, had talents without number.
  • With his latest, hard-hitting campaign ad, Robertson has really gone beyond the pale.
  • I feel childish, unloved, banished, beyond the pale.
  • Opening Catholic schools was bad enough but consorting with the head of the Dublin government was entirely beyond the pale for loyalists.
  • The guardians of the status quo usually judge them to be beyond the pale.
  • The last two were beyond the pale.
  • The matter seemed to lie beyond the pale of any definitive confirmation.
  • Try and put beyond the pale.
  • I am afraid that is beyond my powers.
  • So he adopted the simple expedient of not opening it until it was beyond his power to act on it.
  • The taxpayer, it said, had not established that it was beyond his powers to obtain the information.
  • Then they discovered that this was beyond their power.
  • Unfortunately, I think it may be beyond my powers as a programmer to set up such a counterfeit world.
be beyond price
  • Their demands go beyond all reason.
  • But by this time Maidstone was beyond all reason.
  • He is beyond reason, Diniz.
  • It was beyond all reason that Hal, who had performed flawlessly for so long, should suddenly turn assassin.
  • Their condition is beyond reason, but it is certainly not, as they believe, beyond cure.
  • Civilised society generally only convicts where a man is guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
  • Finally, although it is not proved beyond reasonable doubt, most experts agree that dry foods are beneficial to the teeth.
  • If theft is not proved beyond reasonable doubt, they should consider handling.
  • If we knew that, I think we'd be beyond reasonable doubt.
  • In many cases, it will be hard for the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt that he is lying.
  • It means only that prosecutors failed to prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, he said.
  • Once the issue is validly raised, the prosecution has the burden of disproving it beyond reasonable doubt.
  • They had to feel, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Bill had killed Sandy.
  • In Russia, efforts at political change are linked beyond recall with the problem of supplying food.
  • Daks are known to bounce back, but this one looks beyond recall.
  • He hung left to the rails and by the time Willie Carson was able to switch him, Declassified was beyond recall.
  • If he is beyond recall, then she at least surely deserves a little compassion.
  • Perhaps she had already compromised herself beyond recall by accepting the invitation.
  • His lawyer believes Manson is beyond redemption.
  • Charlotte got back into London rather late that night, and rather tired, but hooked beyond redemption upon Aurae Phiala.
  • Systems may be evil but people are never beyond redemption.
  • The Pistols were already banned from most established London venues; punk rock's reputation for violence was now beyond redemption.
  • The whole business was regrettable but not beyond redemption.
  • However, the director so removed is not without remedy.
  • If a corporate public authority is unable to sue for libel it is, however, by no means without remedy.
  • It was beyond remedy, I thought.
  • This does not mean, however, that a taxpayer would necessarily be without remedy in such a situation.
  • Vernon's work in the community has been beyond reproach.
  • But Jones' track record had always been above reproach.
  • He had a steely streak but his morals and scruples were beyond reproach.
  • He talked of her as a goddess beyond reproach who was being restrained against her will.
  • His boxing skills are beyond reproach.
  • Like Eleanor Roosevelt, Hillary Clinton is a strong individual whose public decorum is usually above reproach.
  • Noah himself is beyond reproach, it is true.
  • The Alumni Club typically enjoys a reputation beyond reproach.
  • The motives were above reproach since a large sum was raised for deserving charities every year.
be beyond/past retrieval
  • Don't ask me how - but I knew it without a shadow of a doubt.
  • Now she knew without a shadow of doubt that she wasn't.
  • The business has succeeded beyond our wildest dreams.
  • But for vast numbers of children in the developing world, such gifts are beyond their wildest dreams.
  • It is riches beyond my wildest dreams and well worth fighting the Second World War for.
  • It was a world beyond my wildest dreams; one I had only seen on celluloid in the cinema at Fontanellato.
  • Our mission reaps rewards far beyond our wildest dreams!
  • Route 66 Magazine, a three-year-old quarterly, is growing beyond the wildest dreams of its publisher, Paul Taylor.
  • Six years ago, Dexter and Birdie Yager had succeeded in their business beyond their wildest dreams.
  • The cartel succeeded beyond its wildest dreams: by last month the price was brushing $ 30.
  • To the contrary, we succeeded beyond our wildest dreams.
not be beyond the wit of somebody
1on or to the further side of something:  They crossed the mountains and headed for the valleys beyond. Beyond the river, cattle were grazing. She drove through Westport, and stopped a few miles beyond at a wayside inn.2later than a particular time, date etc SYN  after:  What changes await us in the coming year and beyond? The ban has been extended beyond 2003. The disco went on until beyond midnight.3more or greater than a particular amount, level, or limit:  More people are choosing to work beyond retirement age. Inflation has risen beyond the 5% level.4outside the range or limits of something or someone:  Such tasks are far beyond the scope of the average schoolkid. expensive luxuries that are beyond the reach of ordinary people5used to say that something is impossible to dobeyond repair/control/belief etc (=impossible to repair, control, believe etc) Scott’s equipment was damaged beyond repair. The town centre had changed beyond all recognition. Due to circumstances beyond our control, the performance has had to be cancelled.6 be beyond somebody to be too difficult for someone to understand:  The whole problem was quite beyond him. Why Joan ever married such an idiot in the first place is beyond me.7used to mean ‘except’ in negative sentences:  Fred owns nothing beyond the clothes on his back.
beyond1 preposition, adverbbeyond2 noun
beyondbeyond2 noun Collocations
COLLOCATIONS FROM OTHER ENTRIES
 medals awarded for bravery above and beyond the call of duty (=greater than it is your duty to show)
 The humor in the movie sometimes goes beyond the bounds of good taste.
(=be possible/not possible) It was not beyond the bounds of possibility that they could meet again.
 I can speak French, but simultaneous translation is beyond my capabilities (=too difficult).
· Occasionally flights are cancelled due to circumstances beyond our control.
 Why you let her talk you into doing such a foolish thing is beyond my comprehension (=impossible for me to understand).
(=better or more than you ever hoped for)· Suddenly he was wealthy beyond his wildest dreams.
(=more than you have to do as part of your job)· She's a doctor who has gone beyond the call of duty in her care for her patients.
 She was pushed beyond her powers of endurance.
(=greater or better than someone expected)· The task took two months to complete, but it was successful far beyond all expectations.
(=be definite)· Her loyalty is beyond question.
(=be so badly damaged that it cannot be repaired)· Unfortunately the engine is beyond repair.
(=be so honest that you are never thought to have done something wrong)· He regarded his friend Henry as being above suspicion.
 It’s surely not beyond the wit of man to come up with a solution.
COLLOCATIONS FROM THE CORPUSNOUN
· These proposals are ridiculous beyond belief.· The media are dull beyond belief because of the heavy censorship.
· The Muses had no instrument peculiar to them, but their voices were lovely beyond compare.· She went to her chamber and used every art she knew to make herself beautiful beyond compare.
Phrases
PHRASES FROM OTHER ENTRIES
  • His early comedies might have been taken to represent an unheard-of civility from the back of beyond.
  • Larky jaunts to the back of beyond returned to fashion with the 1980s boom in travel writing.
  • Whatever anyone says about muggings and suchlike up here, there'd be no one about at all in the back of beyond.
  • And the saluting was beyond belief.
  • Did I just frighten you beyond belief?
  • I think this is idolatry beyond belief.
  • She was tired, tired beyond belief.
  • The media are dull beyond belief because of the heavy censorship.
  • These proposals are ridiculous beyond belief.
  • They have been slashed and burned and damaged beyond belief.
  • What Clemens did next was almost beyond belief.
  • The dancing in the show had a beauty that was beyond compare.
  • She went to her chamber and used every art she knew to make herself beautiful beyond compare.
  • The Muses had no instrument peculiar to them, but their voices were lovely beyond compare.
  • Their written language was the most advanced of the pre-Columbian scripts, and their astronomical knowledge beyond compare.
be beyond/past description
  • Ellen's honesty is beyond dispute.
  • Her professionalism is beyond dispute.
  • That the reports were stolen is beyond dispute. What we need to know is who took them.
  • That the Emperor did not want war is beyond dispute, for the evidence from all sides makes this clear.
  • Besides, we knew beyond doubt that she loved us dearly.
  • I think it unlikely that there is any further evidence which would put the question beyond doubt.
  • It felt as if he could see right inside her head so that he knew beyond doubt the minutest detail of her response.
  • It is beyond doubt that lawmaking was a power to be shared by both Houses and the President...
  • The episode illustrates beyond doubt that the majority voting rules of the Treaty of Rome have teeth.
  • The last sentence takes it as established beyond doubt that the inherent bias in analysis is against issuing regulations.
  • The latter, particularly, is not beyond doubt, but that does not destroy the value of his what-if speculations.
  • You will be so learned, so well prepared, that your future as a musician will be beyond doubt.
  • It may be tempting to describe urban centers in the developing world as almost beyond hope.
  • The condition of Tam's leather jacket had got beyond a joke.
  • Moreover, both the biblical and the scientific accounts deal imaginatively with mysteries beyond our ken.
  • Obviously they can not weigh up the comparative cost of some type of credit which is beyond their ken.
  • Out of our hands and beyond our ken.
  • Burton and his wife had suffered beyond measure.
  • Detesting the faults beyond measure which nature has given to women, he resolved never to marry.
  • It originates in childhood when anyone under ten is adored beyond measure.
  • It puzzled him beyond measure that the boy should have stumbled upon this private area.
  • That notion, too, disturbed him beyond measure.
  • The book was widely translated and copied in the ancient world and was influential beyond measure.
  • The City's ability to keep a secret appears to have improved beyond measure over the past two years.
  • The quarterback is the Herschel Walker of his generation, gifted beyond measure, with skills that astonish and results that disappoint.
  • There was something about the wizard that irked Him beyond measure.
  • It is to risk leaving out what religion is really about, rather like music without sound, or mathematics without numbers.
  • The potential applications are almost without number.
  • They forgot the message times without number.
  • Zbigniew Shapira, not yet thirty, had talents without number.
  • With his latest, hard-hitting campaign ad, Robertson has really gone beyond the pale.
  • I feel childish, unloved, banished, beyond the pale.
  • Opening Catholic schools was bad enough but consorting with the head of the Dublin government was entirely beyond the pale for loyalists.
  • The guardians of the status quo usually judge them to be beyond the pale.
  • The last two were beyond the pale.
  • The matter seemed to lie beyond the pale of any definitive confirmation.
  • Try and put beyond the pale.
  • I am afraid that is beyond my powers.
  • So he adopted the simple expedient of not opening it until it was beyond his power to act on it.
  • The taxpayer, it said, had not established that it was beyond his powers to obtain the information.
  • Then they discovered that this was beyond their power.
  • Unfortunately, I think it may be beyond my powers as a programmer to set up such a counterfeit world.
be beyond price
  • Their demands go beyond all reason.
  • But by this time Maidstone was beyond all reason.
  • He is beyond reason, Diniz.
  • It was beyond all reason that Hal, who had performed flawlessly for so long, should suddenly turn assassin.
  • Their condition is beyond reason, but it is certainly not, as they believe, beyond cure.
  • Civilised society generally only convicts where a man is guilty beyond reasonable doubt.
  • Finally, although it is not proved beyond reasonable doubt, most experts agree that dry foods are beneficial to the teeth.
  • If theft is not proved beyond reasonable doubt, they should consider handling.
  • If we knew that, I think we'd be beyond reasonable doubt.
  • In many cases, it will be hard for the prosecution to prove beyond reasonable doubt that he is lying.
  • It means only that prosecutors failed to prove their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, he said.
  • Once the issue is validly raised, the prosecution has the burden of disproving it beyond reasonable doubt.
  • They had to feel, beyond a reasonable doubt, that Bill had killed Sandy.
  • In Russia, efforts at political change are linked beyond recall with the problem of supplying food.
  • Daks are known to bounce back, but this one looks beyond recall.
  • He hung left to the rails and by the time Willie Carson was able to switch him, Declassified was beyond recall.
  • If he is beyond recall, then she at least surely deserves a little compassion.
  • Perhaps she had already compromised herself beyond recall by accepting the invitation.
  • His lawyer believes Manson is beyond redemption.
  • Charlotte got back into London rather late that night, and rather tired, but hooked beyond redemption upon Aurae Phiala.
  • Systems may be evil but people are never beyond redemption.
  • The Pistols were already banned from most established London venues; punk rock's reputation for violence was now beyond redemption.
  • The whole business was regrettable but not beyond redemption.
  • However, the director so removed is not without remedy.
  • If a corporate public authority is unable to sue for libel it is, however, by no means without remedy.
  • It was beyond remedy, I thought.
  • This does not mean, however, that a taxpayer would necessarily be without remedy in such a situation.
  • Vernon's work in the community has been beyond reproach.
  • But Jones' track record had always been above reproach.
  • He had a steely streak but his morals and scruples were beyond reproach.
  • He talked of her as a goddess beyond reproach who was being restrained against her will.
  • His boxing skills are beyond reproach.
  • Like Eleanor Roosevelt, Hillary Clinton is a strong individual whose public decorum is usually above reproach.
  • Noah himself is beyond reproach, it is true.
  • The Alumni Club typically enjoys a reputation beyond reproach.
  • The motives were above reproach since a large sum was raised for deserving charities every year.
be beyond/past retrieval
  • Don't ask me how - but I knew it without a shadow of a doubt.
  • Now she knew without a shadow of doubt that she wasn't.
  • The business has succeeded beyond our wildest dreams.
  • But for vast numbers of children in the developing world, such gifts are beyond their wildest dreams.
  • It is riches beyond my wildest dreams and well worth fighting the Second World War for.
  • It was a world beyond my wildest dreams; one I had only seen on celluloid in the cinema at Fontanellato.
  • Our mission reaps rewards far beyond our wildest dreams!
  • Route 66 Magazine, a three-year-old quarterly, is growing beyond the wildest dreams of its publisher, Paul Taylor.
  • Six years ago, Dexter and Birdie Yager had succeeded in their business beyond their wildest dreams.
  • The cartel succeeded beyond its wildest dreams: by last month the price was brushing $ 30.
  • To the contrary, we succeeded beyond our wildest dreams.
not be beyond the wit of somebody
the beyond literary whatever comes after this life
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