OUT 
inftead of ale has a foft pulp, of which they make flour. 
N. lat. 23° 28’. E. long. 110° 32... Grofier 
a OUTS HOU, a river of Thibet, which runs into the 
mpoo 
OU- TCH UEN, a town - the kingdom of Corea, in 
King-ki; 59 miles S.8.E. of King-ki—Alfo, a fea-port 
town of China, of the third hie in Quang-tong; 20 miles 
.S.E. of Hoa 
OUTEA, in n Boteny, Aubl. Goian. 28. t. 9 Juff. 347 
b LUUd Hallie, Cuts avy 2 Nublet cut of the Carthea 
appellation of tree, Jus, Vahl retains this genus, as 
in& from the Vouapa of the above writer, by the fol- 
towing chara 
alyx turbinates, ee 
moft very large ns ape one of them abortive. 
Germen falked. Vahl. "Enum. v. 
We are much inclined to the Ra of ena ia judge 
this plant to be a Tamarindus. See RO 
OUTEIRO, in Geography, a town and fortrefs of Por- 
tugal, in the province ot Tras los Montes, feated on a 
mountain; g miles E.S.E. of Bragan a. 
OUTER Istanp, an ifland on the coaft of appa 
in - clufter called St. Augu‘tine’s aa ; S.W. of Sandy 
i 
‘OUTFANGTHEFE, a privilege whereby a lord was 
enabled to call any man dwelling in his fee, but sy for 
felony in another place, to judgment in his own cour 
e word is formed fro e Saxon uf, extra, en 
fang, capio, vel captus ; nd “eof, thief, q.d. fur extha- 
captus. Spelm 
Petals five; the upper- 
P 
‘OUT. FIT, “fignifies the expences of equipping or fitting- 
out a fhip for fea, which includes every thing but the hull, 
fuch as mafts, ph ee fails, cordage, os: artillery, am- 
munition, and all other naval furniture; with a fufficient 
number ft men and pono 
OUT-HAULER, in Sea Language, 7 rope or tackle 
made faft to the tack of ey ib, to haul ae it by. 
OUT-H n Agriculture, a term provincially 
LING, 
applied to the fhogelling out a ditch, for the ufe of the ma 
nure it contains. 
OUT-HOUSE, fuch a building as belongs to, and is 
placed adjoining a dwelling-houfe. 
OUTIMAC eography, a tribe of American In- 
dians, in the territory of Wayne, between wei Michigan 
and St. Clair, The number of warriors is 20 
UTIN, in Ichthyology, a naxe by which one call the 
fifth known among authors by the name of oxyrinchus. 
U-TING, in Geography, a ay of nee = the firft 
rank, in Yun-nan. N. lat. 25° E. lon Zo. 
OUTLAW, UtLacatus, one , deprived ws ie benefit 
of the law, or put out of the king’s protection 
Braéton fays, an outlaw forfeits every thing he has ; 
that, from the time of his outlawry, h 
wears a wolf 
ead, and any body ag kill him ae: efpecially if he 
defend himfelf, or But, in the beginning of king 
Near lawful warrant for it,) to put to death a man out. 
wed. 
OUTLAWRY, or Urztawry, U#lagaria, the punith- 
ment of him who, being called into law, and lawfully fought, 
es (after an original « writ, and the writs of captay, alia. & 
pluries, returned by a fheriff with on eft inventus, and 
an exigent, with a ile a awarded thereupon) ccn- 
temptuoufly refufe to a 
He mutt alfo be eld a ‘five county court-days a month 
between each other; and, if he appear not in that time, 
OUT 
pro exlege tneitur, cum principi non obediat, nee legis & 
extunc exlegabitur ; i.e. he fhall be pronounced to be out of 
he fae 8 seer and deprived of the benefit of ae 
law 
The effe& of which is, if he be outlawed at the fuit of 
another, in a civil caufe, he fhall forfeit all his goods and 
een to the king, and the profits of his land, while the 
outlawry remains in force; and if in treafcn or felony, all 
his lands and tenements which he has in fee, or for life, and 
all his goods and chattels: and in this latter cafe, the law 
interprets his abfence a fufficient evidence of his guilt, and 
without requiring farther proof, accounts him guilty of the 
a&, on which enfues Soerigtica of blood, &c en, 
according to Bra€ton, 
But now, to avoid fuch sorrel it is halden that no 
imfelf a the indi€&im 
after outlawry, in civil cafes, ie “Netendant appears 
; publicly, he may be arrefted by a writ of capias utlagatum, 
and committed till the outlawry be reverfed: which reverfal 
may be had by the defendant’s appearing perfonally in court, 
(and in the king's bench without any perfonal appearance, 
fo that he es by perce acouane to ftatute 4 and 
p- 18.) and any plaufible caufe, however 
flight, will in yt be ‘{afliclent to reverfe it ; - being 
confidered only as a procefs to compel appea ut 
aie the defendant muft pay full cofts, and put "the plaintif 
n the fame = as if he had appeared before the writ 
of exigi factas was awarded. It is ordained by Magna 
Charta, nen no freeman fhall be outlawed, but according to 
the “ ie e lan 
A woman 
man is outlawed. See 
or a wonais cannot be outlawed. 
is faid a "he waived, when a 
WAIVE. 
Out awntss, Clerk of the. See CLERK. 
OUTLICKER, or OUTLIGGER, in a sea a {mall 
end of it. This feldom a 
fhips ; a 
mizen-matt 1s placed fo far bol that there is not room enough 
within board to hs the 
Outligger fe the eis or —s of the word, 
which appears . ce derived from the Dutch witlegger, q. de 
outher. 
OUTLINE, in Painting and Drawing, is the — 
tion of an imaginary line circumfcribing the boun ndary of t 
vifible eres of objects. It is an arbitrary mode of 
