outbrest 
4182 
outdare 
AS. utbrent/aii (= D. uitbrengen 
en = G. ausbringen = Sw. utbrint/ti = Dan. !'- 
briage), < ut, out, + brent/an, bring.] To bring 
out; deliver; utter; express. 
Thus muche as now, O wommanlich wif, 
I may outebringe. Chaucer, Troilus, iii. 107. 
OUt-brothert (out'bruTH'er), . An out-pen- 
sioner. 
That good old blind bibber of Helicon [Homer] came 
5',r[Sameaso toi spelled OUtcrackKout-krak'),,. , 1. Tooutbrag; 
and used so as to simulate a different origin, 1 
namely < out + caste] In India, one who has 
suffered expulsion from caste. 
On a forfeiture of caste by either spouse intercourse 
ceases between the spouses ; if the out-caste be a sonless 
woman she is accounted dead, and funeral rites are per- 
begging to one of the chief cities of Greece and . . . Besides the four castes [of India], there is a large popu- nll t,.raftv fout-kraf ti 
promised them vast corpulent volumes of immortality, f , u known m Pal . iahs or outcast**. ,t n w 
" "'" 
J. T. Wheeler, Short Hist. India, p. 59. 
ing, outkestinge; verbal n. of outcast, v.] 1. 
That which is thrown out or rejected ; offscour- 
2. That which a tree puts forth ; a shoot. 
The vifte [fifth] out-keiKnge of the like stocke [the tree of 
pride] is scorn. Ayenbite of Inwyt (E. E. T. S.), p. 22. 
t. To overtake. Halli- 
promiseu tnem vnsr oorpuum* VUIUIIICB ui uw *"?' , 
they would bestowe upon him but a slender outbnthers 
11U K"-Stuffe (Hart. Misc., VI. 147). outcastingt Jont'kta'ting), . f [< ME. -outcast- 
outbud (out-bud'), v.i. Tobudout; sproutforth. 
Such one it was as that renowmed Snake 
Which great Alcides in Stremona slew, . . . 
Whose many heades, out-budding ever new, 
Did breed him endlesse labor to subdew. 
Spenser, F. Q., I. vil. 17. 
OUtbuild (out-bild'), i: t. To exceed in build- 
ing, or in durability of building. 
Virtue alone outbuilds the pyramids. 
Young, Night Thoughts, vi. 312. 
outbuilding (out'biFding), n. A building near 
or subordinate to a main building ; an outEouse. ^pf ( out-sep! ; ), prey, and conj. [A forced 
A huge load of oak wood was passing through the gate- f orm f Qr excep t fry substitution of out for ex- (L. 
" d KLven Gables, xiii. ex, out). Cf.outtake] Except; unless. 
OUtburn (out-bern'), v. I. intrans. To burn 
away ; be consumed by fire. 
She burn'd out love, as soon as straw out-burneth. 
Shak., Pass. Pilgrim, 1. 98. 
II. trans. To exceed in burning ; burn longer 
than. 
Amazing period ! when each mountain-height 
Out-burns Vesuvius ; rocks eternal pour 
Their melted mass. Young, Night Thoughts, ix. 165. 
boasting. 
Heele out-cracke a Germaine when hee is drunke. 
Marston, The Fawne, iv. 
2. To outshine; surpass in show or pretensions. 
Roberto aduised his brother ... to furnish himselfe 
with more crownes, least hee were outcrackt with new 
formed' for her. Encyc. Brit., V. 191. commers. Greene. Groats-worth of Wit (ed. 1617). 
To exceed in craft 
or cunning; overpower by guile. 
That drug-damn'd Italy hath out-craftied him, 
And he 's at some hard point. 
Shak., Cymbeline, iii. 4. 15. 
mat, wmciijB mruwii uun ui *cjo;^~, v,^., ontrreen (out-kreo') v. i. F< ME. outcrenen; 
ing ; hence, figuratively of persons, a reprobate ; ;f+ P c? \ 
a castaway. 
As clensyngis of this world we ben maad the outcastynye 
of alle thingis til ghit. Wydif, 1 Cor. iv. 13. 
OUtcrier (OUfWte), n. One who cries or pro- 
claims ; specifically, one who proclaims a sale ; 
a public crier; an auctioneer. 
That all such Citizens as ... should be constraint to 
sell their Household stuff . . . should first cause the same 
to be cry'd thro' the City, by a Man with a Bell, and then 
to be sold by the common Outcryer appointed for that pur- 
pose. Baker, Chronicles, p. 394. 
It gan outcrepe at som crevace. 
Chaucer, House of Fame, 1. 2086. 
outcrop (out'krop), >i. The appearing at the 
Look not so near, with hope to understand, surface of a stratum or series of strata, or of a 
Out-cept, sir, you can read with the left-hand. vein or ore-deposit of any kind. The outcrop of a 
B. Jonson, Love's Welcome at Welbeck. metalliferous vein or lode is frequently more or less con- 
Any other county 
We drank the Libyan Sun to sleep, and lit 
Lamps which outburrid Canopus. 
Tennyson, Fair Women. 
Turfe. 
In the kingdom. 
Pan. Outcept Kent. 
B. Joraon, Tale of a Tub, 1. 2. 
outch, interj. See ouclfi. 
outchase (out-chas'), v. t. [< ME. outchaeen; < 
out + chase 1 ."] To chase away; put to flight. 
In so moche, that o [one] gode Cristene man, in gode 
Beleeve, scholde overcomen and out chacen a 1000 cursed 
mysbeleevynge men. Mandemlle, Travels, p. 261. 
cealed by the accumulation of partly decomposed mate- 
rial (see gossan), the result of the decomposition and 
oxidation of the metalliferous part of the lode by atmo- 
spheric agencies. This is called by Cornish miners the 
broil. The outcrops of many veins, on the other hand, 
are very conspicuous, especially when the amount of ore 
present is small, quartz forming the predominating vein- 
stone of a large proportion of the mineral deposits, and 
being very indestructible. The outcrops of the stratified 
formations depend on the amount of inclination of the 
beds. When these lie quite horizontal, there can be no 
outcropping edges of the strata, except when the forma- 
Outburst (out-bersf ), V. i. [< ME. "outbersten, . mmm firniWlm^mnm\ m ripHrnnce from tion'haTbeen cut iiito'by erosion. The position on the 
", /"",*/>,; n ,,.t.hrn*t*n < nut. + burst.-} To burst OUtclearance (out kJer ans), n. Clearan< i gurface rf any outcrop depend9 thereforei on the inclina- 
You will find the duties high at outclearance. 
Foote, Trip to Calais, i. 
onlbresten, outbrasten; < out + burst] To burst 
out. 
Tho bigan his teres more outebreste. 
Chaucer, Troilus, iv. 267. 
outburst (out'berst), n. [< outburst, v] A outclimb (out- klim' ) v. t. To climb beyond; 
breaking or bursting out ; a violent issue or dis- surpass by or as by climbing ; rise higher than ; 
charge ; an outbreak : as, an outburst of wrath, overtop 
outburst-bank (out'berst-bangk), n. In luj- 
rlraul. engin., the middle part in elevation of a 
sea-embankment. The normal ratio of its base 
to its height is as two to one. 
OUtby, OUtbye (out'bi), adv. [<o + byl] 1. 
Outside; outdoors; abroad; at some distance 
Her buildings laid 
Flat with the earth, that were the pride of time. 
And did the barbarous Memphian heaps outclimb. 
B. Jonson, Prince Henry's Barriers. 
They must be sever'd or like palms will grow, 
Which planted near, out-climb their native height. 
Sir W. Davenant, Gondibert, iii. 1. 
surface of any outcrop depends, therefore, on the inclina- 
tion of the bed or vein in question, and on the nature and 
amount of the erosion which has taken place. See cut 
under dip. 
i. To crop out or up; 
come out to the surface 
said of strata, 
outcry "(out'kri), . ; pi. outcries (-kriz). 1. 
A loud or vehement cry or crying; a cry of in- 
dignation or distress; clamor; confused noise ; 
uproar. 
Thy son is rather slaying them ; that outcry 
From slaughter of one foe could not ascend. 
Milton,S. A.,1. 1517. 
The reason that there is such a general outcry among 
from" home: as, I had been'o% and had just outcome (out'kum), n. [< ME. outecome, ut- mj ^^ ^ uioio a ^^ ^ ^.^ _ >!f . B 
got home: the opposite of itibij. [Scotch.] 2. fume; < out+ come] If. A going forth; a ma- against flatterers is that there are so very few good 
In mining, going out of the mine or in the di- rauding expedition; incursion ; inroad. Com- ones. Steele, Tatler, No. 208. 
rection of the shaft : the opposite of inby. pare outroad. 2. That which comes out of or 3. An auction; auction. 
OUtby (out'bi), a. [< outby, adv.] Outlying; 
remote or sequestered. [Scotch.] 
OUtcarry (out-kar'i), v. t. To carry out ; export. 
Sum of the out-carried commodities in value and cus- 
tom, 294,184.17.2. A. Barlow, Weaving, p. 17. 
outcast (out-kasf), v. t. [< ME. outcasten, out- 
kesten (= Sw. utkasta = Dan. udkaste); < out + 
cast 1 ] To throw out; cast forth; expel; reject. 
It being the custom of all those whom the Court casts 
out to labour by all means they can to outcast the Court. 
Heylin, Life of Laud, p. 166. (Dames.) 
outcast (out'kast), a. and n. 
pp. of the verb.] I. a. Cast out; thrown away; 
rejected; hence, forsaken ; forlorn; miserable; 
specifically, despised socially. 
I all alone beweep my outcast state. 
Shale., Sonnets, xxix. 
The fugitive bond-woman, with her son, 
Outcast Nebaioth, yet found here relief. 
Miltm, P. B,., ii. 309. 
Ghosts of outcast women return lamenting, 
Purged not in Lethe. Swinburne, Sapphics. 
results from something else ; issue; result. 
The Crusades were the outcome of a combination between 
monasticism and knighthood. 
Stale, Stud. Med. Hist., p. 333. 
The modern direct way of looking at things the per- 
fectly natural outcome of habit of every man's dealing 
with a thing for himself, and of first necessarily looking to 
see what the thing actually is. 
S. Lanier, The English Novel, p. 91. 
,,<>= Politicians, happily, seldom live to see the final outcome 
3ourt. of their aspirations. Stubbs, Med. and Mod. Hist., p. 20. outcry ( O ut-kri'),0 .t. To cry louder than; 
tomes.) out-COmelingt, [ME. outcomlyng; < out + come in crying ; .hence, to excel in any w 
[< ME. outecaste; comeling.] A stranger; a foreigner. 
I will heal thee of thy wounds, saith the Lord; because outCOUntenanCCt (out-koun'te-nans), V. t. 
ma'rsleketh afte 1 " ' ^"^ " Te^T Tr> ml *'-" : O""*** <">>e undaunte, 
O blood-bespotted Neapolitan. 
Outcast of Naples, England's bloody scourge. 
Shak., 2 Hen. VI., v. 1. 118. 
He dies, sad outcast of each church and state. 
Pope, Moral Essays, i. 204. 
3. A falling out; a quarrel. Burns. [Scotch.] 
Ill sell all at an out-cry. MiddUton, Chaste Maid, iii. 3. 
Their houses and fine gardens given away, 
And all their goods, under the spear at outcry. 
B. Jonson, Catiline, ii. 1. 
A tax was first imposed upon property sold by auction 
by outcry, knocking down of hammer, by candle, by lot, 
by parcel, or by any other means of sale at auction, or 
whereby the highest bidder is deemed to be the purchaser 
in Great Britain in 1777. 
S. Dou-ell, Taxes in England, III. 156. 
over- 
way. 
You shall have some so impudently aspected, 
They will mitcry the forehead of a man. 
Middletm, Mad World, iv. 5. 
In all the storm we must outcry the noise of the tem- 
pest, and the voices of that thunder. 
due'bounds ; 'stretch or extend beyond. J- ^v 1 ^. Works < ed - if 5 ). * 6 40 - 
If, then, such be the capacity and receipt of the mind of out-Cut (out'kut), a. Shaped by cutting away 
man, it is manifest that there is no danger at all in the a part. 
proportion or quantity of knowledge, how large soever, sollerets are remarkable for the large out-cut piece 
C "nX of Learning, i. at the inste P- Bewttt ' Anoient Armour, 12 - 
A remote or ob- OUtdacious (out-da'shus), a. [Also oirdncimi.* : 
a corruption of audacious] Audacious; bold ; 
skE^o^d^^^^i^^UthT oK^S^St-SusSf),^ S2SS! 
selves in the beaten road thereof. ty ; impudence. [Prov. Eng. and vulgar.] 
tha 
Wost thou not wel that thou wonej here a wyje strange, 
An out-comlyng, a carle, we kylle of thyn heued. 
Alliterative Poems (ed. Morris), U. 876. 
outcompass (out-kum'pas), v. t. To exceed 
II. n. If. That which is thrown away or cast OUt-COmert (out'k6r"ner), n. 
forth; refuse. scure place; a retired nook. 
Owte caste (or refuse). Prompt. Pan. 
2. A person expelled or driven out ; an exile ; 
one who is rejected or despised. Fuller, Holy State, II. ix. 5. ou Vdare (out-dar')X t. 1. To dare more than 
. 1. 
To outface ; confront or oppose undauntedly. 
While high Content in whatsoever chance 
Makes the brave mind the starres outcountenance. 
Daviei, Muse's Teares, p. 14. (Dames.) 
2. To put out of countenance. 
Lucanio, loath to be outcountenanst, followed his aduise. 
Greene, Groats-worth of Wit(ed. 1617). 
4. In malting and brewing, increase by mea- out-court (out'kort), . 
sure in the bulk of malt as compared with the court; the precinct. 
The exterior or outer 
surpass in daring. 
O noble fellow ! 
Who sensibly outdares his senseless sword. 
Shak., Cor., i. 4. 53. 
2. To overcome by daring; defy. 
It was myself, my brother, and his son, 
That brought you home, and boldly did outdare 
The dangers of the time. Shak., 1 Hen. IV., v. 1. 40. 
You will raise me, 
And make me out-dare all my miseries? 
Fletcher (and another), False One, iv. 3 
