aside from

Related to aside from: two-fold, at any rate, other than, look to, look up to

aside from

Except for. I like all vegetables, aside from string beans. Aside from that one class, Josh is a very good student.
See also: aside
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

aside from someone or something

not including someone or something. Aside from a small bank account, I have no money at all. Aside from Mary, Nancy, Craig, and Phil, I have no friends on campus.
See also: aside
McGraw-Hill Dictionary of American Idioms and Phrasal Verbs.

aside from

see under apart from.
See also: aside
The American Heritage® Dictionary of Idioms by Christine Ammer.
See also:
  • draw aside
  • drawing
  • lay aside
  • layaway
  • wave aside
  • throw aside
  • thrust aside
  • brush aside
  • toss aside
  • move aside
References in periodicals archive
Some of the standouts aside from the top 10 who didn't make the cut but ripped were Josh Perkins, Ernie Torres, Jose Rojo, Abdias Rivera, and Emmanuel Guzman.
Aside from raising awareness and lobbying Congress to strike down the provision, a handful of activists have also convinced their schools to set aside money in case a prospective student is denied aid under the provision.
Using examples from plays by Corneille, Moliere, and Racine, I will attempt to demonstrate critically how the evolution of the aside from a mechanism of dramatic economy into an essentially comic device parallels the introduction of the proscenium arch in French neoclassical theatres.
Even the most ornate double proscenium arch cannot prevent those actors delivering the aside from silently reminding the spectators that what they see on the stage is just an illusion, an illu-minated vi-sion, that is just as unreal as the relief on the frame around it.
Aside from a marked set of influences - indeed, the show may signal the emergence of the first generation of artists to
83 and taxable to the employee when transferred or set aside from the claims of general creditors.