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outland. In DICTIOUS you will not only get to know all the dictionary meanings for the word
outland, but we will also tell you about its etymology, its characteristics and you will know how to say
outland in singular and plural. Everything you need to know about the word
outland you have here. The definition of the word
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English
Etymology 1
From Middle English outland, outlond, from Old English ūtland (“foreign land, land abroad”), from Proto-Germanic *ūtlandą (“outland”), equivalent to out- + land. Cognate to Dutch uitland, Afrikaans uitland, German Ausland, Danish udland.
The use in the phrase "outland German" is influenced by (or is a calque of) the German cognate of the same meaning, Auslandsdeutsche (see Ausland). The use in the phrase "outland Chinese" is influenced by (or is a calque of) the Chinese term of the same meaning, 華僑 / 华侨 (huáqiáo).
Pronunciation
Adjective
outland (not comparable)
- Provincial: from a province (of the same land).
- Foreign: from abroad, from a foreign land.
1921, Gordon Bottomley, Gruach and Britain's daughter: two plays, page 74:These outland Romans will not kill us all If you permit them to do their governing, Which is so dear to them, over you and us.
1966, Donald Davidson, Poems, 1922-1961, page 107:I heard strange pipes when I was young, / Piping songs of an outland tongue.
- (used with ethnic nationalities) Living abroad, living in a foreign land, expatriate.
1919, William Milligan Sloane, The powers and aims of western democracy, page 402:Whatever dependence the Pan-German chauvinist had placed on outland Germans proved to be a broken reed.
1949, The Reader's Digest, volume 54, page 101:When the "outland Danes," who live in other countries, return by the thousand for the summer festivals, they gather first in the grim 13th-century fortress of Kronborg, [...]
1980, New Society, volume 51, page 546:To China, it is "Chinese territory under British administration" : its citizens are regarded as "home Chinese," not "outland Chinese," and can travel freely to the mother country.
2001 June 12, Mike Echo Mike, “Why do I fly !!!”, in rec.aviation.student (Usenet):And Bruno's name is "Bienenfeld" meaning that I would place him as what are in Cleveland anyway called "Donau Schwaben" i.e., outland Germans living in SE Europe [...]
Synonyms
Derived terms
Noun
outland (plural outlands)
- (especially in the plural) Any outlying area of a country; the provinces.
Hypernyms
Derived terms
Etymology 2
From out- + land.
Verb
outland (third-person singular simple present outlands, present participle outlanding, simple past and past participle outlanded)
- (martial arts) To land more (punches, kicks etc.) than.
Anagrams