beyond ... comprehension• And the creatures of the Dark Ireland, Grainne, are soulless and cruel and evilbeyond your comprehension.• Overall. the biology of the Chesapeake was clearly of an intricacybeyond present comprehension.• To force them to arrive early is beyond comprehension.• She has difficulty with prostitution as something to be understood because she has no direct experience with it-it is beyond her comprehension.• The complexity of the actualexchanges in most economic systems is beyond comprehension.• This was heresy, or at least beyond his comprehension Erica could see the effect her words were having.• Waves of ecstatic and delicatecolorvibrated around me and lulled me to a sense of peacebeyond comprehension.• Her world was tiltingbeyond my comprehension.
Origincomprehension
(1400-1500)Latincomprehensio, from comprehendere; COMPRHEND