- outride
- verb past tense outrode, past participle outridden, (T) to ride faster or further than someone or something else
Longman dictionary of contemporary English. 2004.
Longman dictionary of contemporary English. 2004.
Outride — Out*ride , v. t. To surpass in speed of riding; to ride beyond or faster than. Shak. [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
Outride — Out ride , n. 1. A riding out; an excursion. [R.] [1913 Webster] 2. A place for riding out. [R.] [1913 Webster] … The Collaborative International Dictionary of English
outride — [out΄rīd′] vt. outrode, outridden, outriding 1. to surpass or outstrip in riding 2. to withstand or endure successfully; ride out … English World dictionary
outride — I. transitive verb (outrode; outridden; outriding) Date: 1530 1. to ride better, faster, or farther than ; outstrip 2. to ride out (a storm) II. noun Date: 1880 an unstressed syllable or group of syllables added to a foot in sprung rhythm but not … New Collegiate Dictionary
outride — v. /owt ruyd /; n. /owt ruyd /, v., outrode, outridden, outriding, n. v.t. 1. to outdo or outstrip in riding. 2. (of a ship) to come safely through (a storm) by lying to. v.i. 3. to act as an outrider. n. 4. Pros. an unaccented syllable or… … Universalium
outride — 1. noun A trip on a horse outside an enclosed area, a trip on a horse in the open. 2. verb a) To ride (a horse, bicycle, etc.) better than (someone) … Wiktionary
outride — out|ride [autˈraıd] v past tense outrode [ ˈrəud US ˈroud] past participle outridden [ ˈrıdn] [T] to ride faster or further than someone else … Dictionary of contemporary English
outride — out ride || ‚aÊŠtraɪdÉ™ v. ride better than; ride faster than … English contemporary dictionary
outride — verb (past outrode; past participle outridden) 1》 ride better, faster, or further than. 2》 archaic (of a ship) come safely through (a storm) … English new terms dictionary
outride — out•ride [[t]ˌaʊtˈraɪd[/t]] v. rode, rid•den, rid•ing 1) to outdo in riding 2) (of a ship) to come safely through (a storm) • Etymology: 1520–30 … From formal English to slang