beat the daylights out of

beat the (living) daylights out of (one)

1. To physically attack one, as with punches and other blows, such that they suffer significant injury. This phrase can be used both literally and hyperbolically. Our neighbor is in the hospital because a burglar beat the daylights out of him. I'm worried that the captain of the football team will beat the living daylights out of me if he finds out that I'm secretly seeing his girlfriend. Oh, my boyfriend knows that I would beat the living daylights out of him if he ever lies to me about something that serious.
2. To defeat one decisively in a competition. The final score was 17-1? Wow, we really beat the living daylights out of that team!
See also: beat, daylight, of, out
Farlex Dictionary of Idioms.

beat the (living) daylights out of

give someone a very severe beating. informal
Daylight or daylights has been used from the mid 18th century as a metaphor for ‘eyes’, and here has the extended sense of any vital organ of the body.
See also: beat, daylight, of, out
Farlex Partner Idioms Dictionary
See also:
  • beat the (living) daylights out of (one)
  • beat the hell out of
  • beat the living daylights out of someone
  • beat the tar out of (one)
  • beat/knock/kick the hell out of somebody/something
  • beat/scare the daylights out of somebody
  • knock the (living) daylights out of (one)
  • knock the hell out of
  • knock the hell out of (one)
References in periodicals archive
PETER CORMACK plans to abandon night-time training to help his Morton players beat the daylights out of the opposition and climb off the bottom of the table.