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outlandish

English

Etymology

From Middle English outlandisch, from Old English ?tlendis?, from Proto-Germanic *?tlandiskaz. Related to ?tland (foreign land, land abroad) (English outland). Sense of “bizarre” from 1590s. Surface analysis outland +? -ish. Cognate to German ausländisch, dated Dutch uitlands (now buitenlands), Swedish utländsk, all “foreign, non-domestic”.

Pronunciation

  • IPA(key): /a??t?lænd??/
  • Rhymes: -ænd??

Adjective

outlandish (comparative more outlandish, superlative most outlandish)

  1. bizarre, strange
  2. (archaic) foreign, alien

Synonyms

  • (bizarre, strange): See also Thesaurus:strange
  • (foreign, alien): See also Thesaurus:foreign

Derived terms

  • outlandishly
  • outlandishness

Related terms

  • outland

Translations

References

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outland

English

Etymology 1

From Middle English outland, outlond, from Old English ?tland (foreign land, land abroad), from Proto-Germanic *?tland? (outland), equivalent to out- +? land Cognate to Dutch uitland, Afrikaans uitland, German Ausland. 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, ?? / ?? (huáqiáo).

Pronunciation

  • Hyphenation: out?land

Adjective

outland (not comparable)

  1. Provincial: from a province (of the same land).
  2. 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.
  3. (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" (username), "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
  • (living abroad): expatriate

Noun

outland (plural outlands)

  1. (especially in the plural) Any outlying area of a country; the provinces.
Hypernyms
  • (structural) land
Derived terms
  • outlander
  • outlandish
  • outlands

Etymology 2

out- +? land

Verb

outland (third-person singular simple present outlands, present participle outlanding, simple past and past participle outlanded)

  1. (martial arts) To land more (punches, kicks etc.) than.

Anagrams

  • Daulton

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