| OUTSTAND | • outstand v. (Transitive, archaic) To resist effectually; withstand; sustain without yielding. • outstand v. (Transitive) To surpass in standing; stand or remain beyond; outstay. • outstand v. (Intransitive, archaic) To project outward from the main body; stand out prominently; be prominent. |
| OUTSTARE | • outstare v. (Transitive) To stare at (someone) so hard or long that they look away. • OUTSTARE v. to outdo in staring. |
| OUTSTART | • outstart v. To start out or up. • OUTSTART v. to get ahead of at the start. |
| OUTSTATE | • outstate adj. Of the part of a state of the United States that is away from major metropolitan areas. • outstate adv. To a part of a state of the United States away from major metropolitan areas. • OUTSTATE v. to surpass in stating. |
| OUTSTAYS | • outstays v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outstay. • OUTSTAY v. to surpass in staying power. |
| OUTSTEER | • outsteer v. (Transitive) To steer better than. • OUTSTEER v. to surpass in steering. |
| OUTSTEPS | • outsteps v. Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outstep. • OUTSTEP v. to step beyond. |
| OUTSTOOD | • outstood v. Simple past tense and past participle of outstand. • OUTSTAND v. to stand out, or project, from a surface or mass. |
| OUTSTRIP | • outstrip v. To move more quickly than (someone or something) so as to outrun or leave it behind. • outstrip v. (Figuratively) To exceed or surpass (someone or something). • outstrip v. (Archaic, rare) To exceed or overstep (a boundary or limit); to transgress. |
| OUTSTUDY | • outstudy v. (Transitive) To surpass in studying. • OUTSTUDY v. to surpass in studying. |
| OUTSTUNT | • outstunt v. (Transitive) To perform more or better stunts than. • OUTSTUNT v. to surpass in stunting. |