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Definition of Outrush
1. v. i. To rush out; to issue, or ru&?; out, forcibly.
Definition of Outrush
1. Verb. (intransitive) To rush outward; to issue forcibly. ¹
2. Verb. (American football transitive) To rush more than the other team. ¹
¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Outrush
1. to surpass in rushing [v -ED, -ING, -ES]
Lexicographical Neighbors of Outrush
Literary usage of Outrush
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Dawn in Britain by Charles Montagu Doughty (1906)
"Where covered thicket-hollow is from view ; Such as, whence wont outrush swift
ambushed scythe- carts, Gainst marching legions. ..."
2. Memoir and Scientific Correspondence of the Late Sir George Gabriel Stokes, Bart by Sir George Gabriel Stokes (1907)
"We must distinguish between the outrush of gas resulting from the chemical changes
and the outrush of elastic fluid, gas or air as the case might be. ..."
3. A Text-book of Physics by John Henry Poynting, Joseph John Thomson (1906)
"It then travels back to the open end, where there is an outrush. Now even had
the stream through the slit ceased, the outrush would have sent a rarefaction ..."
4. Proceedings by Pacific Science Association (1921)
"mountain than the source of the outrush of fumes. None of these shocks was of
destructive magnitude, though they resulted from the opening of a zone of ..."
5. The Mining Engineer (1900)
"The wasting, too, generally takes place near the firebox-end of the tubes, and
when the tubes fail, the outrush of steam is mainly into the firebox. ..."
6. Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society by Royal Astronomical Society (1872)
"an inferior limit for the value of the initial velocity of outrush, if we assume
that the apparent height reached by the matter is the real limit of its ..."
7. Thoughts on the Future Civil Policy of America by John William Draper (1875)
"The Crusading outrush to the East was followed on the discovery of America by an
outrush of adventurers across the Atlantic to the West. ..."
8. The Art of Singing: Based on the Principles of the Old Italian Singing by William Shakespeare (1910)
"This should be done by controlling the inspiratory muscles and causing the outrush
to cease, with the throat and mouth open, so that the tone of the voice ..."