| COUNTERGLOW | • counterglow n. The gegenschein. • COUNTERGLOW n. another name for gegenschein. |
| GROUNDWATER | • groundwater n. Water that exists beneath the earth’s surface in underground streams and aquifers. • ground␣water n. Alternative form of groundwater. • GROUNDWATER n. water within the earth esp. that supplies wells and springs. |
| HUNTIEGOWKS | • HUNTIEGOWK n. (Scots) a fools' errand, appropriate to the first of April. |
| OUTDWELLING | • outdwelling v. Present participle of outdwell. • OUTDWELL v. (Shakespeare) to stay beyond. |
| OUTPOWERING | • outpowering v. Present participle of outpower. • OUTPOWER v. to surpass in power. |
| OUTSWEARING | • outswearing v. Present participle of outswear. • OUTSWEAR v. to surpass in swearing. |
| OUTSWEEPING | • outsweeping v. Present participle of outsweep. • OUTSWEEP v. to surpass in sweeping. |
| OUTSWELLING | • outswelling v. Present participle of outswell. • OUTSWELL v. to exceed in swelling. |
| OUTSWINGERS | • outswingers n. Plural of outswinger. • out-swingers n. Plural of out-swinger. • OUTSWINGER n. a ball in cricket that swings outwards. |
| OUTTOWERING | • outtowering v. Present participle of outtower. • OUTTOWER v. to tower above. |
| OUTWEARYING | • outwearying v. Present participle of outweary. • OUTWEARY v. to weary out. |
| OUTWEIGHING | • outweighing v. Present participle of outweigh. • OUTWEIGH v. to weigh more than. |
| OUTWRESTING | • outwresting v. Present participle of outwrest. • OUTWREST v. (Spenser) to extort. |
| OVERWROUGHT | • overwrought adj. Excessively nervous, excited, tense, angry, anxious, or upset; overemotional; very uneasy. • overwrought adj. Elaborate; overdone. • OVERWORK v. to cause to work too hard. |
| SUPERGROWTH | • supergrowth n. (Countable) A growth upon something else. • supergrowth n. (Uncountable) Very rapid growth. • SUPERGROWTH n. exceptional growth. |
| UNDERGROWTH | • undergrowth n. The plants in a forest which only reach a relatively low height (such as shrubs and bushes). • UNDERGROWTH n. low growth on the floor of a forest including seedlings and saplings, shrubs, and herbs. |