Meaning, some people stay in destructive or negative patterns, never rising out of their circumstances to better themselves.
An example is a person who is constantly arriving late to things... you expect them to arrive late at pretty much any function, but secretly you hope they would arrive on time and be punctual.
Let's say for instance, they are getting married, and show up late for their own wedding. That would be an example of them not rising up, at least that one time. You expected them to be late, but that they might step up and be on time for once.
You are very disappointed by this, hence the saying: 'Some people never go beyond what we expect from them'.
Beyond the never ending
We should never forget it.
You are better then he thought and he will never forget you or what ever happened:) it a compliment! :)
"Never ceases to disappoint" means that something consistently fails to meet expectations or fulfill hopes, often resulting in disappointment or dissatisfaction.
They mean that your expectations may be unrealistic or unlikely. They are telling you not to hold your breath, but to move on happily.
The expectations for a class in terms of material to be covered, work to be done, and behavior, are generally clearly laid out in a course syllabus or gone over verbally in the first days of the class. When a student performs above and beyond those expectations, that means the student has either demonstrated knowledge of more material than the class covered, exemplary behavior, or turned in extra credit assignments or unusually high quality work.
If you delight your customers, you have probably exceeded their expectations.
trieing onward from the expectations
To be a disappointment, to not meet expectations.
No, it does not. It it believed to come from the Hebrew word Evehr (עבר) which means beyond (because Abraham came from beyond the Jordan river).
I think you mean 1860. No, there wasn't. At worst, the Confederacy could have reached as far as the Ohio River, but never beyond it.
That is not a word in the English dictionary.