| DUOTONES | • duotones n. Plural of duotone. • DUOTONE n. a drawing etc. done in two tones or colours. |
| OUTBOXED | • outboxed v. Simple past tense and past participle of outbox. • OUTBOX v. to surpass in boxing. |
| OUTDODGE | • outdodge v. (Transitive) To surpass in dodging. • OUTDODGE v. to surpass in dodging. |
| OUTDOERS | • outdoers n. Plural of outdoer. • OUTDOER n. one who outdoes. |
| OUTDROVE | • outdrove v. Simple past tense of outdrive. • OUTDRIVE v. to drive a golf ball farther than. |
| OUTFOXED | • outfoxed v. Simple past tense and past participle of outfox. • OUTFOX v. to outwit. |
| OUTLOVED | • outloved v. Simple past tense and past participle of outlove. • OUTLOVE v. to surpass in loving. |
| OUTMODED | • outmoded adj. Unfashionable. • outmoded adj. Obsolete. • outmoded v. Simple past tense and past participle of outmode. |
| OUTMODES | • outmodes v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outmode. • OUTMODE v. to put out of fashion. |
| OUTMOVED | • outmoved v. Simple past tense and past participle of outmove. • OUTMOVE v. to move faster than. |
| OUTROWED | • outrowed v. Simple past tense and past participle of outrow. • OUTROW v. to surpass in rowing. |
| OUTVOTED | • outvoted v. Simple past tense and past participle of outvote. • OUTVOTE v. to defeat by a majority of votes. |
| UNBOOTED | • unbooted adj. Not wearing boots. • unbooted adj. (Computing, rare) Not having been booted. • UNBOOT v. to take off the boots. |
| UNFOOTED | • unfooted adj. (Poetry) Not assigned a metrical foot. • unfooted adj. (Archaic) Untrodden. • UNFOOTED adj. untrodden. |
| UNROOTED | • unrooted adj. Not rooted. • unrooted adj. Uprooted. • unrooted v. Simple past tense and past participle of unroot. |
| UNTOOLED | • untooled adj. Not tooled. • UNTOOLED adj. not tooled. |
| UPROOTED | • uprooted v. Simple past tense and past participle of uproot. • uprooted adj. (Of a plant) Having been fully removed, including the roots. • uprooted adj. (Figurative, by extension) Having been removed from a familiar circumstance, especially suddenly and unwillingly. |