Outvillain
Out‐vil″lain (?), v. t. To exceed in villainy.
Webster's Revised Unabridged Dictionary, C. & G. Merriam Co., 1913.
3.107 entries
Out‐vil″lain (?), v. t. To exceed in villainy.
Out‐voice″ (?), v. t. To exceed in noise. Shak.
Out‐vote″ (?), v. t. To exceed in the number of votes given; to defeat by votes. South.
Out‐walk″ (?), v. t. To excel in walking; to leave behind in walking. B. Jonson.
Out″wall′ (?), n. The exterior wall; the outside surface, or appearance. Shak.
{ Out″ward (?), Out″wards (?), } adv. [AS. ūteweard. See Out, and -ward, -wards.] From the interior part; in a direction from the interior toward the exterior; out; to the outsi...
Out″ward, a. 1. Forming the superficial part; external; exterior; — opposed to inward; as, an outward garment or layer.Though our outward man perish, yet the inward man is renew...
Out″ward, n. External form; exterior.So fair an outward and such stuff within. Shak.
Out″wards (?), adv. See Outward, adv.
Out‐watch″ (?), v. t. To exceed in watching.
Out″way′ (?), n. A way out; exit.In divers streets and outways multiplied. P. Fletcher.
Out‐wear″ (?), v. t. 1. To wear out; to consume or destroy by wearing. Milton.2. To last longer than; to outlast; as, this cloth will outwear the other. “If I the night outwear....
Out‐wea″ry (?), v. t. To weary out. Cowley.
Out‐weed″ (?), v. t. To weed out.
Out‐weep″ (?), v. t. To exceed in weeping.
Out‐weigh″ (?), v. t. To exceed in weight or value.
Out‐well″ (?), v. t. To pour out. Spenser.
Out‐well″, v. i. To issue forth. Thomson.
Out‐went″ (?), imp. of Outgo.
Out‐whore″ (?), v. t. To exceed in lewdness.
Out‐win″ (?), v. t. To win a way out of.
Out‐wind″ (?), v. t. To extricate by winding; to unloose. Spenser.Dr. H. More.
Out‐wing″ (?), v. t. To surpass, exceed, or outstrip in flying. Garth.
Out‐wit″ (?), v. t. To surpass in wisdom, esp. in cunning; to defeat or overreach by superior craft.They did so much outwit and outwealth us! Gauden.
Out″wit (?), n. The faculty of acquiring wisdom by observation and experience, or the wisdom so acquired; — opposed to inwit. Piers Plowman.
Out‐woe″ (?), v. t. To exceed in woe.
Out‐work″ (?), v. t. To exceed in working; to work more or faster than.