4186 
It is probable that the earthworms plant many of the ash 
outrage 
2. The soldier or soldiers placed at such post 
and sycamore trees that we see perched in unt-nj -the-way or Cation. 
corners. u,xxA.5i. ou tp our ( ou t.p6r'), f. t. To pour out; send forth 
3. Unusual; uncommon. iu a stream; effuse. 
Itwas impossible forapatientof the most out-of-the-way jj e i 00 )j'il, and saw what numbers numberless 
colour not to find a nose to match it._ xhe city gates outpour'd. Milton, P. R. , iii. 311. 
Addiemi and Sieele, Tatler, No. 260. 
outpour (out'por), . 
, , . UUUUUUI luui UVA/J it. |_\ i/wi-j 
4. Departing frqm the proper path; hence, im- pouring . an outflow. 
proper; unbecoming; not the thing. [Colloq.J Ou tp 0ur i n g (out'por'ing), 11. 
lUt-OVen (out'uv'n), n. See oven. outflow; effusion. 
-' - 
[< outpour, ,'.] An out- 
A pouring out; 
outpace (out-pas 
outrun; leave behind. 
outmarch 
outmarch (out-march'), v. t. To march faster 
. than; march so as to leave behind. 
The horse outmarched the foot. Clarendon. 
outmatch (out-mach'), n. t. To surpass as ri- 
val : be more than a match for ; vie successfully 
with; outdo; overmatch. 
In labour the Oxe will out-toile him, and in subtlitie the 
Fox will out match him. 
Breton. Dignitie of Man, p. 14. (Dames.) 
OUtmate (out-mat'), v. t. To outmatch ; out- ovlr (out-6 T ver); '<fo.~~At "a distance: op- ^^ Table . Talk , 9 tne spontaneous inclde ntal out- 
peer; exceed. posed to in-over. [Scotch.] pouring of an overflowing mind. 
Since the pride of your heart so far outmates its_gen- ou ^p ace (out-pas'), V. I. trans. To outwalk or int. to Selden's Table-Talk (ed. Arber), p. 10. 
outpower (out-pou'er), r. t. To surpass in 
power; overpower. 
In the Saxon Heptarchy there was generally one who 
out-powered all the rest. 
Fuller, Ch. Hist., II. iii. 41. (Dairies.) 
Myriads of men, . . . out-powering by numbers all op- 
position. Goldsmith, Citizen of the World, Ixxxvii. 
outpray (out-pra'), v. t. I. To go beyond or 
surpass in prayer; excel in sincerity or fervor 
of prayer or supplication. 
Meantime he sadly suffers in their grief, 
Outweeps an hermit, and outprays a saint. 
Dryden, Annus Mirabilis, St. 261. 
2. To surpass or excel as prayer. 
Our prayers do out-pray his ; then let them have 
That mercy which true prayer ought to 'have. 
Shak., Rich. II., v. 3. 109. 
To exceed in value 
erosity. 
outmeasuret (out-mezh'ur), v. t. To exceed in 
measure or extent. 
And outmeasure time itself. 
Sir T. Brmcne, Vulg. Err., v. 18. 
outmost (out'most), a. superl. [< out + -most.'] 
Furthest outward ; most remote from the mid- 
dle ; outermost. See utmost. 
OUt-moutht (out'mouth), n. A full, sensuous 
mouth. 
A full nether-lip, an outmouth that makes mine water 
at it. Dryden, Maiden Queen, i. 2. 
OUtmove (out-mov'), v. t. To advance so as to 
pa in going; go faster than; outgo; exceed the Admirable Crchton. 
in quickness OUtparamoUT (out-par'a-mor), r. .t. 
My father's ideas ran on as much faster than the trans- 
lation as the translation out-moved my Uncle Toby's. 
Sterne, Tristram Shandy, iii. 39. 
Arion's speed could not outpace thee. 
Chapman, Iliad, xxiii. 
You are walking with a tall varlet, whose strides outpace 
yours to lassitude. Lamb, Old and New Schoolmaster. 
II. intrans. To pace out; pass or go out. 
Richardson. 
The number cannot from my minde outpace. 
Gascoigne, Voyage to Holland, an. 1572. 
(out-par'a-gon), v. t. To surpass 
A heroine of untold wealth, and a hero who outparagons 
The Academy, No. 892, p. 392. 
To exceed 
in number of paramours or mistresses. 
Wine loved I deeply, dice dearly ; and in woman out- 
paramoured the Turk. Shak., Lear, iii. 4. 94. outprize (out-priz'), V. t. 
Outname (out-nam'), v. t. To exceed in name, out-parish (out'par"ish), n. A rural parish, as or estimated worth. 
: ; ;,*<, distinguished from an urban or a burghal par- Either your unparagoned mistress is dead, or she 's out- 
ish; also, a parish lying outside of some place prized by a trifle. Shak., Cymbeline, i. 4. 88. 
of more consequence. out-putt (out-put'), v. t. [< ME.outputteti; < out 
There died of the plague this last week thirteen ; where- + pu t 1 . ] To put out ; exclude, 
of ten in six out-parishes, and three in two parishes with- g e t jj e askere out-putte for euere. 
out the walls. Court and Times of Charles I., II. 104. English Gilds (E. E. T. 8.), p. 362. 
metaph., the state of being out of, and distin- ou t par t (out'part), . A part remote from the output (out'put), n. [< out-put, .] The quan- 
guishable from, the perceiving mind, and not ce * ter or main part- " Qf ^teg^Vt o L ut or produced within a 
merely from the ego or subject ; externality. In hope to hew out of hi8 ^ specified time, as coal from a pit or iron from 
From what we have shewn it is a manifest consequence The fell'ffg or out-parts of a wheel that compasse in the furnace etc in eeneral production ; amount 
that the ideas of space, outness, and things placed at a dis- whole J V 
tance are not, strictly speaking, the object of sight; they To 8erve 8ome goodly chariot. Chapman, Iliad, iv. or r te ot production. 
the-tuX b ^^^ thoro E u^ 
irSron Hist New England II. 199. P"*, but under it the all-round workman is disappearing. 
musk were the only odorous body, he could have no sense Nineteenth Century, XX. 533. 
of outness no power of distinguishing between the ex- OUt-partert (out par'ter), it. in Ola law, a cat- A ^4,,,. in t )j e "Saturday Review" computed not long 
ternal world and himself. tle-stealer. Cowell. ago that the yearly output of novels in this country [Eng- 
Huxleyand Youmam, Physiol., I 289. ou tp asSi v . t. To surpass. Minsheu. land] is about eight hundred. Contemporary Bee., LI. 172. 
OUtnimt, v. t. [< ME. outnimen, < AS. utniman, outpassion (out-pash'on), v. t. To surpass in outputtert (out'put"er), n. In old law, one who 
< ut, out, + niman, take : see out and nim.~\ To passionateness ; exceedorgobeyondin passion, set watches for the robbing of any manor-house, 
take out; except. [Bare.] Cowell. 
And that ne no man out nyme by nojnanere of fraun- He faln na( j calcined all Northumbria out<JUarters(out'lrwar"terz),M. pi. Milit . , quar- 
To one black ash, but that thy patriot passion, 
Siding with our great Council against Tostig, 
Out-passion'd Ms. Tennyson, Harold, iii. 1. 
significance, or importance. 
Why, thou hast rais'd up mischief to his height, 
And found one to outname thy other faults. 
Beau, and Fl., Maid's Tragedy, v. 4. 
outness (out'nes), n. 1. The state of being 
out or beyond; separateness. Hence 2. In 
tance are not, strictly speaking, the object of sight; the; 
are not otherwise perceived by the eye than by the ear. 
Bp. Berkeley, Essay towards a New Theory of Vision, 46. 
If a man had no other sense than that of smell, and 
chyse. English Gilds (E. E. T. S.), p. 353. 
OUtnoise (out-npiz'), v. t. To exceed in noise; 
surpass in noisiness. Fuller. .,, 
OUtnomet, PP- [ME., pp. of outnim.] Taken out-patient (out'pa"shent), n. A patient not ou tr ace (out-ras') 
out; excepted; excepting. residing in a hospital, but receiving medical than; outgtr i p . /: 
Out-nome on to the meyres hows, and an other to the advice, etc., from the institution, 
hospytal, and the thrydde^to the clerkesj>f^the town. OUtpeert(iit-per ),v. t. To outmatch ; outmate ; 
surpass; excel. Shak., Cymbeline, iii. 6. 86. 
out-pensioner (out'pen"shon-er), n. A non- 
resident pensioner, as of Chelsea or Greenwich 
hospital. 
Milit., an advanced 
ters away from the headquarters. 
A dragoon regiment, one of whose outouartert was at the 
barracks. Warren, 
t. To race or move faster 
English Oilds (E. E. T. S.), p. 350. 
OUt-nook (out'nuk), n. An outlying corner. 
The midst of the Con-centrik Orbs, 
Whom neuer Angle nor out-nook disturbs. 
Sylvester, tr. of Du Bartas's Weeks, ii., The Columnes. O ut-picket (out'pik'et), . 
outnumber (out-num'ber), v. t. To exceed in picket. 
number. 
The ladies came in so great a body to the opera that they 
outnumbered the enemy. Addison, Spectator. 
OUt-of-door (out 'pv- dor'), a. Being or done 
out of the house; open-air: as, out-of-door ex- 
ercise. 
. [< ME. outrage, owtrage, 
< OF. outrage, outraige,oult- 
outplay (out-pla'), v. t. 
outmanoeuver; outdo. 
To play better than ; 
Surely 'twill no dishonour be, if I 
Deign to outplay him in his own sly part. 
J. Beaumont, Psyche, i. 36. 
Out-of-doors (out'ov-dorz'), a. Same as out-of- 
door. 
Her oitt-of-doors life was perfect : her in-doors life had 
outpoint (out-point'), v. t. To sail closer to the 
wind than (another vessel). 
This style of yacht has practically no leeway, and would 
outpoint any water boat. Tribune Book of Sports, p. 470. 
its drawbacks. Mrs. GaxkeU, North and South, ii. outpoise (out-poiz'), r. t. To outweigh. 
OUt-of-fashion (out'ov-fash'on), a. That is no j. kllow the nrst woula much o,a-poise the other. 
longer in fashion or accepted use ; antiquated. 
How does he fancy we can sit 
To hear his out-of-fashion wit? 
Swift, Death of Dr. Swift. 
OUt-of-fashionedt (out'ov-fash'ond), a. Out of 
the fashion; old-fashioned, [flare.] 
An old shabby out-of-fashioned hall. 
Fielding, Love in Several Masques, iii. 5. 
out-of-the-way (out'ov-rae-wa'), a. 1. Re- 
mote from populous districts; secluded; un- 
frequented: as, a small out-of-the-way village. 
"Thakeham, the last place God made," so styled from ., ,4. , . , - , s 
its outlandish, or what a true Sussex man would call out- OUtjPOSt (out post), n. 
ufjhe-way situation. 
Sussex Place- Rhymes and Local Proverbs, 
[N. and Q., 6th ser., IX. 402. 
The traveller who begins his Dalmatian studies at Zara 
will perhaps think Dalmatia is not so strange and out-of- 
the-way a land as he had fancied before going thither. 
E. A. Freeman, Venice, p. 126. 
2. Not easily found or observed ; apart from 
what one ordinarily meets with or readilv sees. 
Bowell, Letters, I. v. 11. 
OUtporch (out'porch), 11. An entrance ; a vesti- 
bule. 
Some outporch of the church. 
Milton, Reformation in Eng., ii. 
outport (out'port), n. A port at some distance 
from the seat of trade or from the chief custom- 
house : distinguished from close port. Simmonds. 
Wine landed in an outport, and afterwards brought to the 
port of London by certificate. 
S. Dowell, Taxes in England, II. 19. 
1 . A post or station out- 
side of the limits of a camp, or at a distance 
from the main body of an army: often used 
figuratively. 
Louis the Fourteenth was carrying the outposts of his 
consolidated monarchy far into Germany. 
Ticknor, Span. Lit, I. 417. 
The castle alone in the landscape lay, 
Like an outpost of winter, dull and gray. 
Lowell, The Vision of Sir Launfal, i. 2. 
Pg. ultraje = It. oltraggio (ML. ultragium), ex- 
cess, extravagance, insolence, outrage, < oltre, 
F. outre, < L. ultra, beyond: see ultra.] It. A 
passing beyond bounds; a thing or act not 
within established or reasonable limits ; in gen- 
eral, excess; extravagance; luxury. 
They ne were nat forpampred with outrage. 
Chaucer, Former Age, 1. 6. 
Quod Glotenie, " he is but felle & boone, 
He louethmoremesure than micros*." 
Hymns to Virgin, etc. (E. E. T. S.), p. 74. 
Thet same get wold vp be take and vsyd, 
And all the costlew owtrage refused. 
Occleve (E. E. T. S., extra ser., VIII.), i. 105. 
With equall measure she did moderate 
The strong extremities of their outrage. 
Spenser, F. Q., II. ii. 38. 
2. Violence ; a violent act ; violent injury. 
Yet saugh I woodnesse laughyng, on his rage, 
Armed compleint, outhees, and flers out-rage. 
Chaucer, Knight's Tale, 1. 1154. 
Laste the hye emperour for his outrage 
Come and destruye all hys lond. 
Bob. of Gloucester, p. 47. 
The ecstasy hath so much overborne her that my daugh- 
ter is sometime afeard she will do a desperate outrage to 
herself. Shak., Much Ado, ii. 3. 159. 
3. Gross insult or in jury; infamous wrong ; au- 
dacious and especially violent infraction of law 
and order ; atrocious or barbarous ill treatment ; 
wanton, indecent, or immoral violence, or an 
act of wanton mischief or violence, especially 
against the person. , 
Provided that you do no outrages 
On silly women, or poor passengers. 
Sliak.,T. 0. of V,, iv. 1. 71. 
