different between outseen vs outseek
outseen
English
Verb
outseen
- past participle of outsee
Anagrams
- seen out
outseen From the web:
outseek
English
Etymology
From Middle English outseken, equivalent to out- +? seek. Cognate with Dutch uitzoeken (“to pick, sort out, investigate”), German aussuchen (“to choose, select, pick out”).
Verb
outseek (third-person singular simple present outseeks, present participle outseeking, simple past and past participle outsought)
- (transitive) To seek out; actively or diligently search for; investigate; research.
- 1912, Classical Association (Great Britain), The Classical review: Volume 26:
- […] Who thro' mist and darkness still the truth outsought; […]
- 1987, Building a selling culture:
- […] a selling bank — one that is outseeking and outreaching, one that goes after customers as contrasted with waiting on them.
- 1912, Classical Association (Great Britain), The Classical review: Volume 26:
Derived terms
- outseeker
- outseeking
Anagrams
- ekes out, seek out
outseek From the web:
- what does outseek mean
Share
Tweet
+1
Share
Pin
Like
Send
Share
you may also like
- outseen vs outseek
- outset vs outsee
- newling vs taxonomy
- millilitre vs megalitre
- litre vs millilitres
- reintroduces vs reintroduced
- reintroduce vs reintroduced
- reintroduces vs reintroducers
- introduced vs reintroduced
- logic vs nonlogically
- nonlogical vs illogical
- sandiness vs handiness
- sandiness vs bandiness
- randiness vs sandiness
- unswaddle vs unsaddle
- unsaddles vs unswaddles
- unpaddled vs unsaddled
- coalification vs taxonomy
- zaydeh vs taxonomy
- zaydes vs zaydeh