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  1. To beat the band is to do something to surpass all others and draw attention to yourself, either by being louder, more vigorous or more expert than others. The allusion is to a musical band. Someone would have to be very loud and noticeable to ‘beat the band’ by drowning it out or drawing attention away from it.

  2. To a huge or the greatest possible extent or degree. They've been selling Girl Scout cookies to beat the band ever since they set up shop right outside. The child started screaming to beat the band when her parents took away her cotton candy. See also: band, beat, to. Farlex Dictionary of Idioms. © 2024 Farlex, Inc, all rights reserved.

  3. Learn how to use the idiom "to beat the band" to describe something done with great enthusiasm or intensity, as if it were competing with a marching band. Find out its synonyms, antonyms, variations, and examples in everyday language.

  4. To the greatest possible degree. For example, The baby was crying to beat the band, or The wind is blowing to beat the band, or John is dressed up to beat all. This idiom uses beat in the sense of "surpass."

  5. TO BEAT THE BAND definition: with great energy and vigor; fast and furiously | Meaning, pronunciation, translations and examples.

  6. 1. : to strike repeatedly: a. : to hit repeatedly so as to inflict pain. Inmates were put in solitary for beating other inmates. often used with up. … brutes who beat up their victims without compunction … J. H. Plumb. b. : to walk on : tread. beat the pavement looking for work. c.

  7. This idiom uses beat in the sense of “surpass.” The first term may, according to one theory, allude to a desire to arrive before the musicians who led a parade, so as to see the entire event. Another theory holds that it means “make more noise than (and thereby beat) a loud band.”