[
UK
/bɪjˈɒnd/
]
[ US /ˌbiˈɔnd, bɪˈɑnd, bɪˈɔnd/ ]
[ US /ˌbiˈɔnd, bɪˈɑnd, bɪˈɔnd/ ]
ADVERB
-
on the farther side from the observer
a pond with a hayfield beyond -
in addition
agreed to provide essentials but nothing beyond -
farther along in space or time or degree
through the valley and beyond
to the eighth grade but not beyond
will be influential in the 1990s and beyond
How To Use beyond In A Sentence
- The Kuiper belt is an icy disk of debris orbiting the sun, beyond Neptune, and is the original home of many comets.
- Next follows the cella, and beyond that, the adytum; there are a few sculptures on the walls of the adytum; on those of the pronaos Travels in Nubia
- Beyond affecting the humans and wildlife that call the area home, the Arctic's warmer temperatures and decreases in permafrost, snow cover, glaciers and sea ice also have wide-ranging consequences for the physical and biological systems in other parts of the world. Arctic is warming, NOAA report says
- Beyond the point of Fetal viability it becomes illegal except in extreme circumstances.
- Like the Rhine it also marked a boundary for the Romans; beyond it - unknowable nomads!
- His ring classicism has always argued so persuasively against excessive physical harm, his pride was beyond anything but a regal exit.
- True, Olbermann and Patrick would also make plenty of references to pop culture, but the references came across as charmingly haughty, as if the anchormen were showing us that they had interests that extended beyond the court or field. The Enthusiast
- “Is she a pretty girl?” said the Duke; “her sister does not get beyond a good comely sonsy lass.” The Heart of Mid-Lothian
- Beyond the stand of trees, well away from the road, the hiking trail became dark.
- The shelf is so high it is well out of / beyond my reach.