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10-letter words containing out

  • motormouth — a person who is a constant or irrepressible talker.
  • mouth feel — the tactile sensation a food gives to the mouth: a creamy mouthfeel.
  • mouth harp — harmonica (def 1).
  • mouth-feel — the tactile sensation a food gives to the mouth: a creamy mouthfeel.
  • mouthguard — A device that fits into the mouth over one or both arches of teeth, which is usually made of plastic. They may be used to protect aginst injury during sport or fighting, or may serve a medical purpose.
  • mouthiness — The property of being mouthy.
  • mouthparts — Plural form of mouthpart.
  • mouthpiece — a piece placed at or forming the mouth, as of a receptacle or tube.
  • move about — fidget, be restless
  • muck about — moist farmyard dung, decaying vegetable matter, etc.; manure.
  • mush-mouth — a person who speaks indistinctly.
  • muster out — to discharge from military service
  • never-outs — articles that a supplier, esp a retail store, is 'never out of', i.e. always has in stock
  • non-devout — devoted to divine worship or service; pious; religious: a devout Catholic.
  • nonroutine — a customary or regular course of procedure.
  • nose about — the part of the face or facial region in humans and certain animals that contains the nostrils and the organs of smell and functions as the usual passageway for air in respiration: in humans it is a prominence in the center of the face formed of bone and cartilage, serving also to modify or modulate the voice.
  • ocean pout — an eelpout, Macrozoarces americanus, common along the northeastern coast of North America.
  • out sister — a member of a community of nuns who performs tasks in the outside world on behalf of the community
  • out-basket — out-box.
  • out-hustle — to proceed or work rapidly or energetically: to hustle about putting a house in order.
  • out-relief — public relief administered to people residing in a poorhouse or similar institution.
  • out-scheme — a plan, design, or program of action to be followed; project.
  • out-thrust — thrust or extended outward: a friendly, outthrust hand.
  • outachieve — (transitive) To surpass in achievement; to achieve more than.
  • outbalance — to outweigh.
  • outbargain — to surpass in bargaining
  • outbidding — Present participle of outbid.
  • outbluster — to surpass in blustering
  • outbraving — Present participle of outbrave.
  • outbreathe — to breathe out
  • outclassed — to surpass in excellence or quality, especially by a wide margin; be superior: He far outclasses the other runners in the race.
  • outclasses — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outclass.
  • outcompete — to strive to outdo another for acknowledgment, a prize, supremacy, profit, etc.; engage in a contest; vie: to compete in a race; to compete in business.
  • outcropped — Simple past tense and past participle of outcrop.
  • outcrossed — Simple past tense and past participle of outcross.
  • outcrosses — Plural form of outcross.
  • outdatedly — in an outdated manner
  • outdazzles — Third-person singular simple present indicative form of outdazzle.
  • outdeliver — to surpass or outdo in delivery
  • outdenting — Present participle of outdent.
  • outdweller — a person who dwells away from or is remote from a particular place.
  • outer join — (database)   A less commonly used variant of the inner join relational database operation. An inner join selects rows from two tables such that the value in one column of the first table also appears in a certain column of the second table. For an outer join, the result also includes all rows from the first operand ("left outer join"), or the second operand ("right outer join"), or both ("full outer join"). A field in a result row will be null if the corresponding input table did not contain a matching row. For example, if we want to list all employees and their employee number, but not all employees have a number, then we could say (in SQL-92 syntax, as used by Microsoft SQL Server): SELECT employee.name, empnum.number FROM employee LEFT JOIN empnum ON employee.id = empnum.id or, in Sybase syntax: SELECT employee.name, empnum.number FROM employee, empnum WHERE employee.id *= empnum.id The "*" on the left means "left outer join". "*=*" would be a full outer join. In Oracle syntax: SELECT employee.name, empnum.number FROM employee, empnum WHERE employee.id = empnum.id (+) Note that the "(+)" on the right means "left outer join". These all mean that all rows from the left-hand "employee" table will appear in the result, even if there is no match for their ID in the empnum table. Where there is no empnum.id equal to a given employee.id, a result row is output anyway but with all result columns from the empnum table null (empnum.number in this case).
  • outfielder — one of the players, especially in baseball, stationed in the outfield.
  • outfitters — Plural form of outfitter.
  • outfitting — an assemblage of articles that equip a person for a particular task, role, trade, etc.: an explorer's outfit.
  • outflanked — Simple past tense and past participle of outflank.
  • outflowing — Flowing out.
  • outgassing — to remove (adsorbed or occluded gases), usually by heat or reduced pressure.
  • outgeneral — to outdo or surpass in generalship.
  • outglitter — to glitter more than
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