To OUT-LE'AP, v.a. To pafs by leaping; to ftart 
beyond. 
OU'T-LEAP, f. Sally; flight; efcape.—Since youth 
muft have fome liberty, fome out-lcaps, they might be- 
under the eye of a father, and then no very great harm 
can come of it. Loclie on Education. 
To OUT-LEAR'N, v. a. To learn falter; to learn more 
than another. 
OU'T-LICKER, f. A naval word: a fmall piece of 
timber fattened to the top of the poop. 
To OUT-LI'E, v.a. To furpafs in lying.—He might 
verily think that I could out-lie the legends. Bp. Hall's 
Hon. of the Marr. Clergy. 
With royal favourites in flattery vie, 
And Oldmixon and Burnet both out-lie. Pope. 
OU'T-LIER, /. One who lies not, or is not refident, 
in the place with which his office or duty connects him.— 
The party fent mefiengers for all their out-liers within 
twenty miles of Cambridge to come at their eledtion. 
Bentley's Letters. 
To OUT-LIV'E, v.a. To live beyond; to furvive.—* 
His courage was fo fignal that day, that too much could 
not be expedted from it, if he had out-lived it. Clarendon. 
— The foldier grows lefs apprehenfive, by computing 
upon the difproportion of thofe that out-live a battle, to 
thofe that fall in it. L'EJlrange. 
He that out lives this day, and comes fafe home, 
Will ftand a-tiptoe when this day is nam’d. Shalicfpeare. 
Thou muft out-live 
Thy youth, thyftrength, thy beauty, which will change 
To wither’d, weak, and gray. Milton's P. L. 
Time, which made them their fame out-live. 
To Cowley fcarce did ripenefs give. Denham. 
OUT-LIV'ER, f. A furvivor. 
To OUT-LOO'K, v. a. To face down ; to brow-beat. 
.—Fidtions and mormoes too weak to out-look a brave 
glittering temptation. Hammond. 
I cull’d thefe fiery fpirits from the world. 
To out-looli conqueft, and to win renown, 
Ev’n in the jaws of danger and of death. Shakefpeare. 
To look out; to feledt: 
Away to the brook, 
All your tackle out-look; 
Here’s a day that is worth a year’s wifhing: 
See that all things be right, 
For it would be a fpight, 
To want tools when a man goes a-fifliing. Cotton. 
OU'T-LOOK, f. Vigilance; forefight: 
From nobler recompenfe above applaufe, 
Which owes to man’s fhort out-look all its charms. Young. 
OU'T-LOPE, f. [from out, and loopen, Dut. to run.] 
An excurfion. Not in ufe: 
Out-lopes fometimes he doth aflay, 
But very Ihort. Florio's Tr. of Montaigne, 1613. 
To OUT-LUS'TRE, v.a. To excel in brightnefs.—She 
went before others I have feen, as that diamond of yours 
out-lujlres many I have beheld. Shakefpeare's Cymbeline. 
OUT-LY'ING, pari. adj. Not in the common courfe 
of order. Removed from the general fcheme.—The laft 
furvey I propofed of the four out-lying empires, was that 
of the Arabians. Temple. 
To OUT-MA'RCH, v. a. To leave behind in the march. 
—The horfe out-marched the foot, which, by reafon of the 
heat, was not able to ufe great expedition. Clarendon. 
To OUT-MEAS'URE, v. a. To exceed in meafure.—• 
The prefent age hath attempted perpetual motions and 
engines, and thofe revolutions might out-latt the exem¬ 
plary mobility, and out-mecfure time itfelf. Brown. 
To OUT-NUM'BER, v.a. To exceed in number. —The 
U T 111 
ladies came in fo great a body to the opera, that they out¬ 
numbered the enemy. Addifon. 
To OUT-PA'CE, v.a. To out-go; to leave behind.— 
Orion’s fpeed could not out-pace thee. Chapman's Iliad. 
To OUT-PAR'AMOUR, v.a. To exceed in keeping 
miftrefl’es.—Wine loved I deeply; dice dearly; and in 
woman out-paramour'd the Turk. Shakefpeare's K. Lear. 
OU'T-PARISH, f. Parifh not lying within the walls. 
—In the greater out-parifhes, many of the poorer pariffiio- 
ners, through negledi, do periffi, for want of fome heedful 
eye to overlook them. Graunt. 
OU'T-PART, f. Part remote from the centre or main 
body.—He is appointed to fupply the bilhop’s j urifdidfion, 
and other judicial offices in the out-parts of his diocefe. 
Ayliffe. 
OU'T-PARTERS, f. A kind of free-booters in Scot¬ 
land. Phillips. 
To OUT-PA'SS, v.a. To go beyond ; to excel. 
To OUT-PEE'R, v. a. To furpafs in noblenefs: 
Great men, 
That had a court no bigger than this cave, 
Could not out-peer thefe twain. Shakefpeare. 
To OUT-POI'SE, v.a. To out-weigh.—If your parts 
of virtue, and your infirmities, were caft into a balance, 
I know the firft would much out-poife the other. Howell. 
OU'T-PORCH, /.' An entrance.—Coming to the biffiop 
with fupplication into the falutatory, fome out-porch of 
the church. Milton. 
OU'T-PORT, f. A port at fome diftance from the city 
of London. 
OU'T-POST, f. A military ftation without the limits 
of the camp, or at a diftance from the main body of the 
army.-—Men placed at fuch a ftation. 
To OUT-POU'R, v.a. To emit; to fendforthinaftream s 
He looked, and faw what number numberlefs 
The city-gates out-pour'd; light armed troops 
In coats of mail and military pride. Milton. 
ToOUT-PRA'Y, v.a. To exceed in earneftnefs of 
prayer: 
Meantime he fadly fuffers in their grief; 
Out-weeps a hermit, and out-prays a faint. Dryden. 
To OUT-PRE'ACH, v. a. To exceed in the power of 
preaching.—You would be very eloquent; able to out- 
preach all the orators you ever heard from the pulpit, to 
write more pathetical defcriptions of the madnefs of a 
carnal life, than from any more innocent fpeculator could 
be hoped for. Hammond. 
To OUT-PRI'ZE, v. a. To exceed in the value fet 
upon it: 
Either your unparagon’d miftrefs is dead, or 
She’s out-prized by a trifle. Shakefpeare » 
To OUT-RA'ZE, v.a. To root out entirely: 
Yet fliall the axe of juftice hew him down. 
And level with the root his lofty crown : 
No eye fliall his out-raz'd impreffion view. 
Nor mortal know where fuch a glory grew. Sandys. 
To OUT-RE'ACH, v. a. To go beyond.—This ufage 
is derived from fo many defcents of ages, that the caufe 
and author out-reach remembrance. Carew. — Our fore¬ 
fathers could never dream fo high a crime as parricide, 
whereas this out-reaches that fadt, and exceeds the regular 
diftindtions of murder. Brown. 
To OUT-RE'ASON, v.a. To excel in reafoning; to 
reafon beyond.—They ftep forth men of another lpirit, 
great linguifts, powerful difputants, able to cope with 
the Jewifti fanhedrim, to baffle their profoundeft rabbies, 
and to oat-reafon the very Athenians. South. 
To OUT-REC'KON, v.a. To exceed in aflumed com¬ 
putation.—The Egyptian priefts pretended an exadt chro¬ 
nology for fome myriads of years, and the Chaldeans and 
Affyrians far out-rechon them, Pearfon on the Creed. 
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