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Exact Match for "out"

  • out
    adj. 1. not in possession or control.
    Ex. the Republicans are out, the Democrats in.
    2. not in use, action, fashion, or existence.
    Ex. The fire is out. Full skirts are out this season.
    3. not correct; in the wrong.
    Ex. He

  • out
    adv. 1. away; forth.
    Ex. The water will rush out. Spread the rug out.
    2. not in or at a position or state.
    Ex. That style went out of fashion. The miners are going out on strike.
    3a. not at home, away from one's office or work.

  • out
    expr. at (or on the) outs, quarreling; disagreeing.
    Ex. to be on the outs with a friend.

  • out
    expr. out and away, beyond all others; by far.
    Ex. This is out and away the warmest day we have had this summer. He is out and away the best player.

  • out
    expr. out for, looking for; trying to get.
    Ex. He is out for the best deal he can get.

  • out
    expr. out of it, (Informal.) left out of what is going on; lacking a sense of being part of the proceedings.
    Ex. The Bishop had never felt so out of it as he did late in July, at the dedication of the new cathedral (New Yorker).

  • out
    expr. out of,
    a. from within.
    Ex. She took a piece of candy out of the box. I sipped some soup out of the bowl.
    b. so as to have left; no longer in.
    Ex. He is out of the house. In another year he will be out of the army.

  • out
    expr. out to, eagerly or determinedly trying to.
    Ex. to be out to show him up.

  • out
    interj. (Archaic.) an exclamation of indignation or reproach.
    Ex. Out upon you!

  • out
    noun 1. outs, people not in office; political party not in power.
    Ex. An internal struggle is now taking place that is more than an effort by the outs to get in (Time).
    2. something wrong.
    3. that which is omitted.
    4. the fact

  • out
    out, adverb, adjective, noun, preposition, interjection, verb.

  • out
    prep. 1. from out; forth from.
    Ex. He went out the door.
    2. (Informal.) out along.
    Ex. Drive out Main Street.

  • out
    v.i. to go or come out; be disclosed.
    Ex. Murder will out.

  • out
    v.t. 1. to put out.
    Ex. Please out the fire.
    2. to be made public; be publicly exposed.
    Ex. The identities of all 355 check floaters will not be made public until next month, but the 24 most flagrant offenders will be outed next week (

Starts With "out"

  • out sister
    out sister
    a nun, especially of a secluded order, working outside a convent.

  • out-
    out-
    (prefix.)
    1. outward; forth; away.
    Ex. Outburst = a bursting forth. Outbound = outward bound. Other examples are:
    2. outside, in literal or figurative positions; at a distance; living or acting outside boundaries (opposed to

  • out-and-out
    out-and-out, adjective.
    thorough; complete; unqualified.
    Ex. an out-and-out lie.

  • out-and-outer
    out-and-outer, noun.
    a thorough-going person or thing; perfect example of the kind.

  • out-basket
    out-basket, noun.
    a shallow container with a low rim, used to hold completed or outgoing work, mail, or memorandums; out-tray.

  • out-group
    out-group, noun.
    (Sociology.) everyone outside the group of which one is a member.

  • out-Herod
    expr. out-Herod Herod,
    a. to outdo Herod (represented in the old mystery plays as a blustering tyrant) in violence.
    Ex. I could have such a fellow whipt for overdoing Termagant: it out-Herods Herod (Shakespeare).
    b. to outdo in any ex

  • out-Herod
    out-Herod, transitive verb.
    to surpass (anyone) in evil or extravagance.

  • out-island
    out-island, noun.
    an outlying island.
    Ex. I would rather make for an out-island like Eleuthera, which is well-spoken of, or remote Inagua with its flamingoes and spoonbills (Cyril Connolly).

  • out-islander
    out-islander, noun.
    a native or inhabitant of an out-island.

  • out-migrant
    out-migrant, noun.
    a person who out-migrates.

  • out-migrate
    out-migrate, intransitive verb, -grated,-grating.
    to take part in an out-migration; move out of a community or area to live somewhere else.

  • out-migration
    out-migration, noun.
    the act or process of moving out of an area, community, or locality to settle elsewhere.

  • out-of-body
    out-of-body, adjective.
    characterized by or involving dissociation from one's own body; having to do with parapsychological phenomena in which a person sees himself and his surroundings from an external position in space.

  • out-of-bounds
    out-of-bounds, adjective, adverb.
    1. outside the established limits or boundaries; not to be crossed, entered, or used.
    Ex. Some of its offices and workshops are completely out-of-bounds to everyone except an authorized handful of research men

  • out-of-court settlement
    out-of-court settlement,
    the settlement of a litigation between parties without the aid or sponsorship of the court. Such a settlement is not binding upon the court, but the court usually permits withdrawal of the suit.

  • out-of-date
    noun out-of-dateness.

  • out-of-date
    out-of-date, adjective.
    not in present use; old-fashioned.
    Ex. A horse and buggy is an out-of-date means of traveling.
    (SYN) outmoded.

  • out-of-door
    out-of-door, adjective. outdoor.

  • out-of-doors
    adj. outdoor.

  • out-of-doors
    noun, adv. outdoors.

  • out-of-doors
    out-of-doors, adjective, noun, adverb.

  • out-of-phase
    out-of-phase, adjective.
    (of electric currents) of different phases.
    Ex. The resulting interference of the out-of-phase waves reduces the strength of the signal (Scientific American).

  • out-of-pocket
    out-of-pocket, adjective.
    requiring or incurred through direct cash payment.
    Ex. The government's actual out-of-pocket expenditures will not exceed the total revenue taken in (Wall Street Journal).

  • out-of-print
    adj. no longer in type or being reprinted and therefore not actively being sold by the publisher.
    Ex. He loaned us out-of-print books (Kathryn Hulme).

  • out-of-print
    noun an out-of-print book.

  • out-of-print
    out-of-print, adjective, noun.

  • out-of-the-way
    out-of-the-way, adjective.
    1. seldom visited; remote; unfrequented; secluded.
    Ex. an out-of-the-way cottage.
    2. seldom met with; unusual.
    Ex. out-of-the-way bits of information.

  • out-of-town
    out-of-town, adjective.
    living or situated in, coming from, or having to do with territory outside the limits of a town or city specified or understood.
    Ex. out-of-town tryouts.

  • out-of-towner
    out-of-towner, noun.
    (Informal.) a person who lives outside the limits of a town or city.

  • out-of-work
    adj. unemployed.

  • out-of-work
    noun a person who is unemployed.
    Ex. Lord Rowton started the first hostels in 1892 to meet the urgent need for clean, cheap accommodation for ... the out-of-work (Manchester Guardian Weekly).

  • out-of-work
    out-of-work, noun, adjective.

  • out-party
    out-party, noun, pl.-ties.
    a political party not in power.
    Ex. For a minority out-party, any position except ""me too"" almost inevitably is going to become simple opposition (Tom Wicker).

  • out-tray
    out-tray, noun.
    (Especially British.) out-basket.

  • outachieve
    outachieve, transitive verb, -chieved,-chieving.
    to surpass in achievements; do better than.
    Ex. America has almost begged for trouble by expecting children to outachieve their parents, yet wanting them still to look up to them (Time).

  • outact
    outact, transitive verb.
    to surpass in acting.

  • outage
    outage, noun.
    1. a period of interrupted service; time during which the providing of something, as electric power, gas, or water, is halted.
    2. the condition of being interrupted.

  • outargue
    outargue, transitive verb, -gued,-guing.
    to outdo or defeat in arguing.

  • outasight
    outasite oroutasight, adjective.
    (U.S. Slang.)
    1. very advanced or unconventional; far-out.
    2. out of this world; incomparable; wonderful.

  • outasite
    outasite oroutasight, adjective.
    (U.S. Slang.)
    1. very advanced or unconventional; far-out.
    2. out of this world; incomparable; wonderful.

  • outback
    adj. of, belonging to, or located in the outback.
    Ex. In the outback country he found a shifting population of aborigines (Time).

  • outback
    noun 1. the Australian hinterland or back country.
    2. the hinterland of any country.
    Ex. the Canadian outback.

  • outback
    outback, noun, adjective.

  • outbacker
    outbacker, noun.
    a person who lives or settles in the back country of Australia.

  • outbalance
    outbalance, transitive verb, -anced,-ancing.
    1. to weigh more than.
    2. (Figurative.) to exceed, as in value, importance, or influence.

  • outbid
    outbid, transitive verb, -bid,-bidor-bidden,-bidding.
    1. to bid higher than (someone else), as in a card game.
    2. to underbid.
    Ex. Three firms from the United States ... outbid British and Belgian companies for Government contracts (Lon

  • outbloom
    outbloom, transitive verb.
    to surpass in bloom.

  • outboard
    adj., adv. 1. outside of the hull of a ship or boat.
    2. away from the middle of a ship, boat, or aircraft.
    3. outside of or away from the middle of an aircraft or spacecraft.
    Ex. an outboard aerial.
    4. (in machinery) outside; ou

  • outboard
    noun 1. a small boat with an outboard motor.
    2. outboard motor.

  • outboard
    outboard, adjective, adverb, noun.

  • outboard bearing
    outboard bearing
    the bearing farthest from the crank or other driving part.

  • outboard motor
    outboard motor
    a portable gasoline or electric motor attached to the outside of the stern of a boat or canoe. It usually has a vertical drive shaft connected to a propeller.

  • outboarding
    outboarding, noun.
    riding in a boat that has an outboard motor.

  • outbound
    outbound, adjective.
    outward bound.
    Ex. an outbound ship, outbound flights.

  • outbrave
    outbrave, transitive verb, -braved,-braving.
    1. to face bravely, especially with a show of defiance.
    2. to be braver than; surpass in daring or courage.
    Ex. I would ... Outbrave the heart most daring on earth ... To win thee, lady (Shak

  • outbreak
    noun 1. a breaking out.
    Ex. outbreaks of anger.
    (SYN) outburst.
    2. a public disturbance; riot.
    Ex. The outbreak was mastered by the police in two hours.

  • outbreak
    outbreak, noun, verb, -broke,-broken,-breaking.

  • outbreak
    v.i. (Archaic.) to break out; burst forth.
    Ex. The blare of horns outbroke (William Morris).

  • outbreed
    outbreed, transitive verb, -bred,-breeding.
    to breed from individuals or stocks that are not closely related.

  • outbreeding
    outbreeding, noun.
    a breeding from individuals or stocks that are not closely related.

  • outbuild
    outbuild, transitive verb, -built,-building.
    to build more or better than.

  • outbuilding
    outbuilding, noun.
    a shed or building built against or near a main building.
    Ex. Barns are outbuildings on a farm.

  • outburn
    outburn, verb, -burnedor-burnt,-burning.

  • outburn
    v.i. to burn out, or until consumed.
    Ex. She burn'd out love, as soon as straw outburneth (Shakespeare).

  • outburn
    v.t. to surpass in burning; burn brighter than.
    Ex. We lit Lamps which outburn'd Canopus (Tennyson).

  • outburst
    outburst, noun.
    1. the act of bursting forth.
    Ex. an outburst of laughter, an outburst of anger, an outburst of smoke.
    2. a sunspot or stellar explosion.
    3. an outbreak; violent disorder; riot.
    Ex. racial outbursts.

  • outby
    outbye oroutby, adverb.
    (Scottish.) out a little way; outside.
    Ex. Step outbye to the door a minute (Robert Louis Stevenson).

  • outbye
    outbye oroutby, adverb.
    (Scottish.) out a little way; outside.
    Ex. Step outbye to the door a minute (Robert Louis Stevenson).

  • outcast
    adj. 1. being an outcast; homeless; friendless.
    2. (of things) rejected; discarded.

  • outcast
    noun 1. a person or animal cast out from home and friends.
    Ex. Criminals are outcasts of society. That kitten was just a little outcast when we found it. Pearl was a born outcast of the infantile world (Hawthorne).
    2a. refuse; offal.

  • outcast
    outcast (1), noun, adjective, verb, -cast,-casting.

  • outcast
    outcast (2), noun.
    (Scottish.) a falling out; quarrel.

  • outcast
    v.t. to cast out; reject; banish.
    Ex. The patient was outcast by society, left on a barren island (Philip Hope-Wallace).

  • outcaste
    outcaste, noun.
    in India:
    1. a Hindu who has lost or is put out of his caste.
    2. a person not of one of the four principal castes, such as a Pariah; person without caste or of so low a caste as to be for all practical purposes without

  • outclass
    outclass, transitive verb.
    to be of higher class than; be much better than.
    Ex. ... and found themselves outclassed financially and socially by the flashy ringside crew (Harper's).

  • outclimb
    outclimb, transitive verb, -climbedor (Archaic)-clomb,-climbing.
    to surpass in climbing.
    Ex. This ... truck can outspeed, outclimb, outdo any other VW Truck on the road today (New York Times).

  • outcome
    outcome, noun.
    a result; consequence.
    Ex. the outcome of a race.
    (SYN) upshot, issue.

  • outcrop
    noun 1. the state or fact of a rock, stratum, or the like, coming to the surface of the earth.
    Ex. the outcrop of a vein of coal.
    2. a part that comes to the surface; such rock exposed at the surface or covered only by soil.
    Ex. The ou

  • outcrop
    outcrop, noun, verb, -cropped,-cropping.

  • outcrop
    v.i. to come to the surface; appear.
    Ex. a field outcropped with many boulders.

  • outcropping
    outcropping, noun.
    1. the act or fact of cropping out.
    2. a part that crops out.

  • outcross
    noun the offspring resulting from outcrossing.

  • outcross
    outcross, verb, noun.

  • outcross
    v.t. 1. to subject to outcrossing.
    2. to cross with an unrelated breed or race; outbreed.

  • outcrossing
    outcrossing, noun.
    the mating of livestock of different strains but the same breed.

  • outcry
    noun 1. a crying out; sudden cry or scream.
    (SYN) shout.
    2. a great noise or clamor.
    Ex. (Figurative.) an outcry of disgust by the students and teachers.
    (SYN) uproar.
    3. (Archaic.) an auction.

  • outcry
    outcry, noun, pl.-cries,verb, -cried,-crying.

  • outcry
    v.t. to outdo in clamor; shout down.

  • outcurve
    outcurve, noun.
    a baseball pitch that curves away from the batter.

  • outdare
    outdare, transitive verb, -daredor-durst,-dared,-daring.
    1. to dare or meet defiantly; outbrave.
    Ex. And boldly did outdare The dangers of the time (Shakespeare).
    2. to surpass in daring.

  • outdate
    outdate, transitive verb, -dated,-dating.
    to make out of date or obsolete.
    Ex. Constantly improving communications are steaidly outdating many of the old reasons for divided authority (Roderick Haig-Brown).

  • outdated
    outdated, adjective.
    out-of-date; old-fashioned.
    Ex. Some outdated dances, such as the Charleston, are still danced sometimes for fun. Good manners can never become outdated.
    (SYN) obsolete.

  • outdid
    outdid, verb.
    the past tense of outdo.
    Ex. The girls outdid the boys in neatness.

  • outdistance
    outdistance, transitive verb, -tanced,-tancing.
    to leave behind; outstrip.
    Ex. The winner outdistanced all the other runners in the race. (Figurative.) The Bolsheviks brought out a paper called Pravda (Truth) in April, and its circulation outd

  • outdo
    noun outdoer.

  • outdo
    outdo, transitive verb, -did,-done,-doing.
    to do more or better than; surpass.
    Ex. Men will outdo boys in most things.
    (SYN) exceed, beat.

  • outdone
    outdone, verb.
    the past participle of outdo.
    Ex. The girls were outdone by the boys in baseball.

  • outdoor
    outdoor, adjective.
    1. done, used, or living outdoors.
    Ex. outdoor games, an outdoor meal.
    2. designed for the outdoors; open-air.
    Ex. an outdoor theater.
    3. outside a hospital, poorhouse, or other institution, as a person

  • outdoors
    adj. outdoor; outdoorsy.
    Ex. outdoors clothing, outdoors sports.

  • outdoors
    adv. out in the open air; not indoors or in the house.
    Ex. to sleep outdoors.

  • outdoors
    noun the world outside of houses; the open air.
    Ex. We must protect the wildlife of the great outdoors.

  • outdoors
    outdoors, adverb, noun, adjective.

  • outdoorsman
    outdoorsman, noun, pl.-men.
    a man, such as a hunter, fisherman, or camper, who spends much time outdoors for pleasure.

  • outdoorsy
    outdoorsy, adjective.
    characteristic of or suitable for the outdoors or for outdoorsmen.
    Ex. outdoorsy clothing.

  • outdraw
    outdraw, transitive verb, intransitive verb, -drew,-drawn,-drawing.
    1. to attract more people or attention than (something else).
    Ex. The football games outdrew all the other college sports combined.
    2. to pull out a pistol, sword, or o

  • outdrive
    outdrive, transitive verb, -drove,-driven,-driving.
    1. to drive a vehicle faster or more skillfully than (someone else).
    2. to drive a golf ball farther than (someone else).

  • outen
    outen, preposition.
    (Dialect.) out; out of; out from.

  • outer
    adj. 1. on the outside; external.
    Ex. an outer garment. Shingles are used as an outer covering for many roofs.
    (SYN) exterior.
    2. farther out from a center.
    Ex. the sun's outer corona.
    (SYN) outward.

  • outer
    noun a person who publicly discloses information, especially of a private nature, about an individual.
    Ex. The gleam in the eyes of the outers ... is the gleam of the authoritarian (New Republic).

  • outer
    outer, adjective, noun.

  • outer city
    outer city
    (U.S.) the outskirts of a city; suburbs.

  • outer core
    outer core
    the third of the four layers of the earth, lying between the mantle and the inner core.

  • outer ear
    outer ear,external ear.

  • outer product
    outer product
    (Mathematics.) =cross product.

  • outer shell
    outer shell
    the first of the four layers of the earth, lying above the mantle; crust.

  • outer space
    adj. outer-space.

  • outer space
    outer space
    1. space beyond the earth's atmosphere.
    Ex. The moon is in outer space. Far up in outer space, U.S. satellites derive their radio voices from the transistor (New Yorker).
    2. space beyond the solar system.
    Ex. There are

  • outer table
    outer table
    the side of a backgammon board opposite the inner table.

  • outer-directed
    outer-directed, adjective.
    outgoing; sociable; extroverted.
    Ex. ... almost 28 per cent feel that a minister should be an ""outer-directed person"" or ""radiant personality"" (Time).

  • outercoat
    outercoat, noun.
    a coat worn over the regular clothing, such as a topcoat or overcoat, but usually not a raincoat.

  • outermost
    adj. farthest out; most outward.
    Ex. an atom which has only one electron in its outermost electron shell (W. H. Haslett).

  • outermost
    adv. in the most outward position.

  • outermost
    outermost, adjective, adverb.

  • outerwear
    outerwear, noun.
    clothing worn over underwear or other clothing.
    Ex. shirts, slacks, jackets and other outerwear (Wall Street Journal).

  • outface
    outface, transitive verb, -faced,-facing.
    1. to face boldly; defy.
    Ex. The world's hostility, steadily increasing, was confronted and outfaced by ... Victoria (Lytton Strachey).
    (SYN) brave.
    2a. to stare at (a person) until he st

  • outfall
    outfall, noun.
    the outlet or mouth of a river, drain, sewer, or other effluent source.

  • outfield
    outfield, noun.
    1a. the part of a baseball field beyond the diamond or infield.
    b. the three players in the outfield.
    2. the part of a cricket field farthest from the batsman.
    3. (Scottish.) the outlying land of a farm, that is

  • outfielder
    outfielder, noun.
    a baseball player stationed in the outfield.

  • outfight
    outfight, transitive verb, -fought,-fighting.
    to fight better than; surpass in a fight.

  • outfit
    noun 1. all the articles necessary for any undertaking or purpose.
    Ex. a sailor's outfit, an outfit for a camping trip, a bride's outfit.
    (SYN) equipment, gear.
    2. (U.S.)
    a. a group working together, such as a group of soldiers

  • outfit
    outfit, noun, verb, -fitted,-fitting.

  • outfit
    v.i. to secure an outfit or equipment.
    Ex. We will outfit two days before sailing.

  • outfit
    v.t. to furnish with everything necessary for any purpose; equip.
    Ex. He outfitted himself for camp.

  • outfitter
    outfitter, noun.
    1. a person who outfits, especially a dealer in outfits as for traveling or athletic sports.
    2. a person who sells clothing at retail, especially men's clothing.

  • outflank
    noun outflanker.

  • outflank
    outflank, transitive verb.
    1. to go around or extend beyond the flank of (an opposing army or other hostile force); turn the flank of.
    Ex. The city was perilously outflanked, and [George] Washington had to pull back (New Yorker).
    2. (Fi

  • outflow
    outflow, noun.
    1. a flowing out.
    Ex. the outflow from a water pipe, an outflow of sympathy.
    2. that which flows out.

  • outfoot
    outfoot, transitive verb.
    1. (of a boat, especially a sailboat) to go faster than (another).
    2. to surpass as in walking or running.

  • outfox
    outfox, transitive verb. outsmart.
    Ex. Since I couldn't outrun him I had to outfox him (New York Times).

  • outfrown
    outfrown, transitive verb.
    to outdo in frowning; frown down.

  • outgame
    outgame, transitive verb, -gamed,-gaming.
    to surpass in gaminess or mettle.

  • outgas
    outgas, transitive verb, -gassed,-gassing.
    to drive out or free gases from.
    Ex. to outgas a metal or a vessel.

  • outgate
    outgate, noun.
    1. a way to go out; exit.
    2. a passage or way out; outlet.

  • outgeneral
    outgeneral, transitive verb, -aled,-alingor (especially British.)-alled,-alling.
    to be a better general than; get the better of by superior strategy.

  • outgiving
    adj. very friendly; outgoing.
    Ex. They are outgiving, they apparently like to have fun, they appreciate a joke (Wall Street Journal).

  • outgiving
    expr. outgivings, money spent; outgoings.
    Ex. ... the outgivings and disbursements to traders (Robert Blair).

  • outgiving
    noun 1. the act of giving out something.
    2. that which is given out.
    3. an utterance or statement.

  • outgiving
    outgiving, noun, adjective.

  • outgo
    noun 1. what goes out, especially what is paid out; amount that is spent; outlay; expenditure.
    Ex. Damage to their economy through these restrictions is costing the Mexican Government more than it loses in dollar outgo (New York Times).
    2. t

  • outgo
    outgo, noun, pl.-goes,verb, -went,-gone,-going.

  • outgo
    v.t. 1. to exceed or surpass; excel; outstrip; outdo.
    Ex. In worth and excellence he shall outgo them (Milton).
    2. (Archaic.) to pass; outdistance.

  • outgoing
    adj. 1a. outward bound; going out; departing.
    Ex. an outgoing ship, the outgoing tide.
    b. retiring or defeated.
    Ex. an outgoing legislator.
    2. inclined to offer one's time, ideas, energy, or the like, without much urging; very f

  • outgoing
    expr. outgoings, an amount of money spent.
    Ex. ... causing the Chairman's eyebrows to lift when he looks at the outgoings for stationery on the Balance Sheet (Observer).

  • outgoing
    noun 1. the act or fact of going out.
    2. that which goes out.

  • outgoing
    outgoing, adjective, noun.

  • outgoingness
    outgoingness, noun.
    the quality of being outgoing; sociability; friendliness.
    Ex. so extreme in his expansiveness and outgoingness (Harper's).

  • outgrew
    outgrew, verb.
    the past tense of outgrow.
    Ex. (Figurative.) He used to stutter but he outgrew it.

  • outgrow
    outgrow, verb, -grew,-grown,-growing.

  • outgrow
    v.i. to grow out; project; protrude.

  • outgrow
    v.t. 1. to grow too large for.
    Ex. to outgrow one's clothes.
    2. (Figurative.) to grow beyond or away from; get rid of by growing older.
    Ex. to outgrow boyhood friends, to outgrow a babyish habit.
    3. to grow faster, or taller, or

  • outgrown
    outgrown, verb.
    the past participle of outgrow.
    Ex. My last year's clothes are now outgrown.

  • outgrowth
    outgrowth, noun.
    1. something that has grown out; offshoot.
    Ex. A corn is an outgrowth on a toe. A twig is an outgrowth on a branch.
    2. (Figurative.) a natural development, product, or result.
    Ex. This big store is the outgrowth o

  • outguard
    outguard, noun.
    a guard at a distance from the main body of an army; advance guard; outpost.

  • outguess
    outguess, transitive verb,
    to be too clever for; get the better of; outwit.

  • outgun
    outgun, transitive verb, -gunned,-gunning.
    1. to have more weapons than (the opposition).
    Ex. The Battle of the River Plate, in which three outgunned cruisers took on the German pocket battleship Admiral Graf Spee (Daily Telegraph).
    2.

  • outgush
    noun the act or fact of gushing out; sudden outflow.

  • outgush
    outgush, verb, noun.

  • outgush
    v.i. to gush out or forth.

  • outhaul
    outhaul, noun.
    (Nautical.) a rope by which a sail is hauled out to the end of a boom, yard, or spar.

  • outhit
    outhit, transitive verb, -hit,-hitting.
    to surpass in hitting skill or number of hits.
    Ex. Williams, 39, but still pulling the ball sharply, outhit Mickey Mantle, 25, by some 21 points (Newsweek).

  • outhouse
    outhouse, noun.
    1. an enclosed outdoor toilet; privy.
    2. a separate building used in connection with a main building; outbuilding.
    Ex. Near the farmhouse were sheds and other outhouses.

  • outing
    adj. of or for an outing.
    Ex. an outing dress.

  • outing
    noun 1a. a short pleasure trip or excursion; walk or drive.
    Ex. On Sunday the family went on an outing to the beach.
    b. a holiday spent outdoors away from home.
    Ex. a weekend outing on the sea.
    2. the part of the sea out from th

  • outing
    outing, noun, adjective.

  • outing flannel
    outing flannel orcloth
    a soft cotton cloth with a short nap, woven to look like flannel.

  • outjockey
    outjockey, transitive verb, -eyed,-eying.
    to get the better of by adroitness or trickery; outwit.

  • outlaid
    outlaid, verb.
    the past tense and past participle of outlay.

  • outlain
    outlain, verb.
    the past participle of outlie (1).

  • outland
    adj. 1. outlying.
    Ex. outland districts.
    2. (Archaic.) foreign; alien.
    Ex. outland merchants (William Morris).

  • outland
    noun 1. outlying land.
    Ex. the outland of an estate.
    2. (Archaic.) a foreign land.

  • outland
    outland, adjective, noun.

  • outlander
    outlander, noun.
    1. (Informal.) an outsider; stranger.
    2. a foreigner; alien.

  • outlandish
    adv. outlandishly.

  • outlandish
    noun outlandishness.

  • outlandish
    outlandish, adjective.
    1. not familiar; strange or ridiculous; queer.
    Ex. an outlandish hat. What outlandish manners!
    (SYN) odd, bizarre.
    2. looking or sounding as if it belonged to a foreign country.
    Ex. an outlandish cust

No additional English content available for 'out'.

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