1. Exced:
It means exceeding numbers, limits, and goals. It is appropriate to use it when there are specific numbers or standards.
Example sentence:
THE COST OF THE PROJECT EXCEEDEDED THE BUDGET. Her Test Scores Exceeded EXPECTATIONS. (Her test results exceeded expectations.)
2. Cross over:
It means crossing the border and rivers.
It can be used not only for physical movement, but also when it is beyond the fields and genres.
Example sentence:
THE BRIDGE CROSSES OVER THE RIVER.
Her Research Crosses Over Into Severity Different Fields.
3. Pass over:
It means passing by a place or something.
It can be used for a time process or a certain stage.
Example sentence:
(The plane flew over the city.)
The deadline has passed. (The deadline has passed.)
4. Beyond:
It can be used in the sense of "exceeding", but the nuance of "located on the other side" is strong.
It is suitable for representing areas that cannot be reached or exceeding imagination.
Example sentence:
The Truth is beyond OUR UNDERSTANDING. (Truth is beyond our understanding)
(The universe is beyond Our imagination. The universe is beyond our imagination)
5. Surpass:
It can be used in the sense of "exceeding", but the nuance of "overtaking" is strong.
In competition and comparison, there is the meaning of defeating the opponent.
Example sentence:
He Surpassed All Expections. (He exceeded all expectations)
Her Team Surpassed The Competition and Won The Championship.
summary
Exced: Exceeds numerical values and limits
Cross over: crossing the border etc.
PASS OVER: Pass over the place and things
Beyond: on the other side of ~
Beyond: on the other side of ~
BESIDE and NEXT TO are both in English, indicating that things and people are very close to other things or people. But they have slightly different nuances.
BESIDE: "Beside" indicates that something or a person is right next to other things or people in the sense of "nearby". However, "BESIDE" is often used in relatively formal context and is also used in a metaphor (for example, "Beside OneSelf with Joy" means "forget me with joy").
Next to: "Next to" also means "next to", indicating that something or a person is very close to other things or people. "Next to" is more common than "BESIDE" and is often used in everyday conversations.
compass
north, east, south, west
OPPOSITES
on, top, over, above, superior, summit, upper part, sovereign
under, bottom, below, underneath, beneath, substructure, subordinate
up, rise, going up,
down, fall, going down
in, into, inside
out, outside
height
high, tall, low, middle
length
short, long
weight
light, heavy
depth
shallow, deep
thickness
thick, thick, thin, thin
big, huge, large, great, enormous, walloping, massive, jumbo, gigantic, giant, vast
medium, intermediate, average
small, tiny, little, pocket size
left-hand side, left, right-hand side, right, center
next to, beside, behind, corner, around
between, interval, while, during
front, facade, back, rear, width, side
across, exceed, cross over, surpass, pass over, through
this, here, close, near, nearby, over here
that, far, distant, over there
forward, towards, backward
departure, take off, leave, go, from, push
arrival, landing, come, to, pull
straight, solid line, bend, dotted line, broken line, diagonal line, parabola, wavy line, arrow, curved, winding, crooked, radial, spiral
parallel, along
angle, degrees
horizontal, 90 degrees, right angle, perpendicular, vertical
circle, sector, hemisphere, ellipse, oval, orb, globe, sphere, semicircle
protractor, set square, ruler, compass
cylinder, cone
pi, diameter, radius, center, circumference
whole, all, half, quarter
area, ㎡, square metre
volume, capacity, ㎥, cubic metre
triangle, base, apex, hypotenuse, acute angle, obtuse angle
equilateral triangle, right triangle, isosceles right triangle, triangular pyramid, triangular prism
square, rectangle, rhombus, trapezoid, parallelogram, four sided pyramid, quadrangular prism, cube
diagonal
face, edge, length, height, width, depth
surface
pentagon, hexagon, octagon, decagon, pentagram


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