114 OUT 
If any think brave death out-weighs bad life, 
Let him exprefs his difpofition. Shakefpeare's Coriol. 
To OUT-WELL', v. a. To pour out. Notin ufe: 
As when old father Nilus ’gins to fwell 
With timely pride about the ^Egyptian vale, 
II is fattie waves do fertile (line out-well, 
And overflow each plain and lowly dale. Spenfer. 
To OUT-WIN', v. a. To get out of: 
It is a darkfome delve far under ground, 
■yVith thorns and barren breaks environd round. 
That none the fame may eafily out-win ; 
Yet many waies to enter may be found, 
But none to iflue forth, when one is in. Spenfer. 
To OUT-WI'ND, v. a. To extricate; to unloofe.— 
When fhalt thou once out-wincl thyfelf from this fad yoke ? 
More's Life of the Soul. 
To OUT-WING', v. a. To out-ftrip; to out-go.—My 
fong the midnight raven has out-wivg'd. Young's Night 
Thoughts. 
His courfer fprings 
O’erhills and lawns, and even a vvifh out-wings. Garth'sOv. 
To OUT-WIT', v. a. To cheat; to overcome by ftra- 
'tagem.—The truer-hearted any man is, the more liable 
he is to be impofed on ; and then the world calls it out¬ 
witting a man, w'hen he is only out-knaved. L'Ef range .— 
Juftice forbids defrauding, or going beyond, our brother 
in any-manner, when we can over-reach and out-wit him 
in the fame. Kettlewell.- —Nothing is more equal in juftice, 
and indeed more natural in the diredl confequences of 
effe&s and caufes, than for men wickedly wife to out-wit 
themfelves ; and for fuch as wreftle with Providence, to 
trip up their own heels. South. 
OU'T-WORK, f Parts of a fortification next the 
enemy; any work raifed outwardly to fortify or defend.— 
Take care of our out-work, the navy-royal, which are the 
■walls of the kingdom ; and every great (hip is an impreg¬ 
nable fort; and our many fafe and commodious ports as 
the redoubts to fecure them. Bacon. —When the foul is 
beaten from its firft ftation, and the mounds and out¬ 
works of virtue are once broken down, it becomes quite 
another thing from what it was before. South. 
Death hath taken in the out-works, 
And now afiails the fort; I feel, I feel him. 
Gnawing my heart-ftrings. Denham. 
OUT-WO'RN, part. Confumed or deftroyed by ufe: 
Better at home lie bed-rid, idle, 
Inglorious, unemploy’d, with age out-worn. Milton. 
To OUT-WOR'TH, v.a. To excel in value.—A beg¬ 
gar’s book out-worths a noble’s blood. Shakefp. Hen. VIII. 
To OUT-WRES'T, v.a. To extort by violence : 
The growing ahguifti 
Rankled fo fore and fefter’d inwardly, 
Till that the truth thereof I did out-wrcf. Spenfer. 
OUT-WROU'GIiT, part. Out-done; exceeded in ef¬ 
ficacy : 
In your violent afts, 
The fall of torrents and the noife of tempefts, 
The boyling of Carybdis, the fea’s wildnefs, 
The eating force of flames, and wings of winds, 
Be all out-wrought by your tranfcendent furies. B.Jonfon. 
To OUT-ZA'NY, v.a. To exceed in buffoonery : 
G, run not proud of this: yet, take thy due: 
Thou doft out-zany Cokely. B. Joifoil's Epigr. 130. 
OUTAlTA'NI, a town of Upper Siam: eighty miles 
north-weft of Louvo. 
OUTANUL'LA, a town of Bengal, on the Ganges: 
five miles fouth of Rajemal. 
OUT AP ALL AM', a town of Hindooftan: ten miles 
eaft-north-eaft of Coimbetore. 
OUT 
OU'TARD BA'Y, a bay of Canada, on the north fide 
of the river St. Lawrence. Lat-42.2.N. Ion. 68.15. W. 
OUTCA'ST, part. [It may be obferved, that both the 
participle and the noun are indifferently accented on ei¬ 
ther fyllable. It feems moll analogous ta accent the par¬ 
ticiple on the laft, and noun on the firft.] Thrown into the 
air as refufe, as unworthy of notice : 
Abandon foon, I read, the caitive fpoil 
Of that fame outcaft carcafs. Spenfer. 
Banilhed; expelled : 
Behold, inftead 
Of us outcaft, exil’d, his new delight 
Mankind created. Milton's P. L. 
OU'TCAST, f. Exile; one rejected; one expelled.— 
He dies fad outcaft of each church and ftate. Pope. 
O blood-befpotted Neapolitan, 
Outcaft of Naples, England’s bloody fcourge ! Skakefpeare. 
For me, outcaft of human race, 
Love’s anger only waits, and dire difgrace. Prior. 
OUTCH, a province of Hindooftan, between the ri¬ 
vers Chunaub and Indus, near their union. 
OUTCILAC'TAL, a town of Thibet: fixty-feven miles 
eaft of Harachar-Hotun. 
OUTCHOU', a river of Thibet, which runs into the 
Sanpoo. 
OU'TCHU-MOU'TCHIN, a Tartarian ftandard, in 
Chinefe Tartary. Lat. 45. 8.N. Ion. 117. 14. E. 
OU'TCRY, f. Cry of vehemence ; cry of diftrefs; cla¬ 
mour.-—Thefe outcries the magiftrates there fhun, fince 
they are readily hearkened unto here. Spenfer on Ireland. 
So Arrange thy outcry, and thy words fo Arrange 
Thou interpofeft, that my fudden hand, 
Prevented, fpares. Milton's P. L. 
Clamour of deteftation.—There is not any one vice in¬ 
cident to the mind of man, againft which the world has 
raifed fuch a loud and univerfal outcry , as againft ingrati¬ 
tude. South. —A public fale ; an auftion.—The populace 
by outcry to be fold. Southerns. 
That my lords, the fenators, 
Are fold for (laves, their wives for bondwomen. 
Their houfes and tine gardens given away, 
And all their goods under the lpear at outcry. 
B. Jonfon's Catiline. 
GUTF/A, f. in botany. See Tamarindus and Ma- 
CROLOEIUM. 
OUTEI'RO, a town and fortrefs of Portugal, in the 
province of Tra los Montes, on a mountain: nine miles 
eaft-fouth-eaft of Braganga, and twenty-one north-weft of 
Miranda de Duero. 
OU'TER, adj. That which is without: oppofed to 
inner. —The kidney is a conglomerated gland only in the 
outer part; for the inner part, whereof the papillae are 
compofed, is mufcular. Grew's CoJ'mol. 
OU'TER I'SLAND, an ifland on the coaft of Labrador, 
in the clufter called St. Auguftine’s Square : fouth-weft of 
Sandy-ifland, 
OU'TERLY, aclv. Towards the outfide.—In the lower 
jawq two tufics like thole of a boar, Handing outerly, an 
inch behind the cutters. Grew. 
OU'TER MOST, adj. Remoteft from the midft.—Trjq if 
three bells were made one within another, and air betwixt 
each, and the outermojl bell were chimed with a hammer, 
how the found would differ from a (ingle bell. Bacon.— 
Many handfome contrivances of drawbridges I had feen, 
fometimes many upon one bridge, and not only one after, 
or behind, another, but alfo fometimes two or three on a 
bread, the outermojl ones ferving for the retreat of the 
foot, and the middle for the horfe and carriages. Brown’s 
Travels. 
OU'TFIT,_/! A naval term, fignifying the equipment 
of a fliip for her voyage. 
OU'TIMACKS, 
