OUTSWEETEN
OUTSWEE'TEN, verb transitive To exceed in sweetness.
American Dictionary of the English Language, Noah Webster, 1828.
1.512 entries
OUTSWEE'TEN, verb transitive To exceed in sweetness.
OUTSWELL', verb transitive To overflow; to exceed in swelling.
OUTTALK, verb transitive outtauk'. To overpower by talking; to exceed in talking.
OUTTHROW, verb transitive To throw out or beyond.
OUTTONGUE, verb transitive outtung'. To bear down by talk, clamor or noise.
OUTTOP', verb transitive To overtop. [Not used.]
OUTVAL'UE, verb transitive To exceed in price or value.
OUTVEN'OM, verb transitive To exceed in poison.
OUTVI'E, verb transitive To exceed; to surpass.
OUTVIL'LAIN, verb transitive To exceed in villainy.
OUTVOICE, verb transitive outvois'. To exceed in roaring or clamor. [Not used.]
OUTVO'TE, verb transitive To exceed in the number of votes given; to defeat by plurality of suffrages.
OUTWALK, verb transitive outwauk'.1. To walk faster than; to leave behind in walking.2. To exceed the walking of a specter.
OUT'WALL, noun1. The exterior wall of a building or fortress.2. Superficial appearance. [Unusual.]
OUT'WARD, adjective [Latin versus.]1. External; exterior; forming the superficial part; as the outward coat of an onion; an outward garment.2. External; visible; opposed to inwa...
OUTWARD-BOUND', adjective Proceeding from a port or country.
OUT'WARDLY, adverb1. Externally; opposed to inwardly; as outwardly content, but inwardly uneasy.2. In appearance; not sincerely. Many may inwardly reverence the goodness which t...
OUT'WARDS, adverb1. To the outer parts; tending or directed towards the exterior.The light falling on them [black bodies] is not reflected outwards2. From a port or country; as ...
OUTWASH', verb transitive To wash out; to cleanse from. [Little used.]
OUTWATCH', verb transitive To surpass in watching.
OUTWEAR, verb transitive1. To wear out. [Not used.]2. To pass tediously to the end.By the stream, if I the night outwear -3. To last longer than something else. [This is the com...
OUTWEE'D, verb transitive To weed out; to extirpate, as a weed.
OUTWEE'P, verb transitive To exceed in weeping.
OUTWEIGH, verb transitive outwa'y. [See Weigh.]1. To exceed in weight.2. To exceed in value, influence or importance.One self-approving hour whole years outweighs of stupid star...
OUTWELL', verb transitive or i. To pour out. [Not used.]
OUTWENT', preterit tense of outgo.
OUTWHO'RE, verb transitive To exceed in lewdness.