Outstart
Out‐start″ (?), v. i. To start out or up. Chaucer.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, C. & G. Merriam Co., 1913.
3.107 entries
Out‐start″ (?), v. i. To start out or up. Chaucer.
Out‐stay″ (?), v. t. To stay beyond or longer than.She concluded to outstay him. Mad. D' Arblay.
Out‐step″ (?), v. t. To exceed in stepping.
Out‐storm″ (?), v. t. To exceed in storming.Insults the tempest and outstorms the skies. J. Barlow.
Out″street′ (?), n. A street remote from the center of a town. Johnson.
Out‐stretch″ (?), v. t. To stretch out. Milton.
Out‐stride″ (?), v. t. To surpass in striding.
Out‐strike″ (?), v. t. To strike out; to strike faster than. Shak.
Out‐strip″ (?), v. t. [imp. & p. p.Outstripped (?); p. pr. & vb. n.Outstripping.] To go faster than; to outrun; to advance beyond; to leave behind.Appetites which... had outstri...
Out‐suf″fer (?), v. t. To exceed in suffering.
Out‐swear″ (?), v. t. To exceed in swearing.
Out‐sweet″en (?), v. t. To surpass in sweetness. Shak.
Out‐swell″ (?), v. t. 1. To exceed in swelling.2. To swell beyond; to overflow. Hewyt.
Out‐take″ (?), prep. Except. R. of Brunne.
Out‐tak″en (?), p. p. or prep. Excepted; save. Wyclif. Chaucer.
Out‐talk″ (?), v. t. To overpower by talking; to exceed in talking; to talk down. Shak.
Out‐tell″ (?), v. t. To surpass in telling, counting, or reckoning. “I have outtold the clock.” Beau. & Fl.
Out″term′ (?), n. An external or superficial thing; outward manner; superficial remark, etc.Not to bear cold forms, nor men's outterms. B. Jonson.
Out‐throw″ (?), v. t. 1. To throw out. Spenser.2. To excel in throwing, as in ball playing.
Out‐toil″ (?), v. t. To exceed in toiling.
Out‐tongue″ (?), v. t. To silence by talk, clamor, or noise. Shak.
Out‐top″ (?), v. t. To overtop.
Out‐trav″el (?), v. t. To exceed in speed or distance traveled. Mad. D' Arblay.
Out‐twine″ (?), v. t. To disentangle.
Out‐val″ue (?), v. t. To exceed in value. Boyle.
Out‐ven″om (?), v. t. To exceed in venom.
Out‐vie″ (?), v. t. To exceed in vying. Dryden.