| outland | If you go drinking with Tom, be prepared to listen to some pretty outlandish cock and bull stories. |
| outland | |
| outland |
| Outland | a. [ Out + land. See Outlandish. ] |
| outland | n. The regions of a country or territory remote from the main cities; the outlying provinces. [ PJC ] |
| Outlander | n. A foreigner. Wood. [ 1913 Webster ] |
| Outlandish | a. [ AS. ūtlendisc foreign. See Out, Land, and -ish. ] Him did outlandish women cause to sin. Neh. xiii. 26. [ 1913 Webster ] Its barley water and its outlandish wines. G. W. Cable. [ 1913 Webster ] Something outlandish, unearthy, or at variance with ordinary fashion. Hawthorne. [ 1913 Webster ] -- |
| outlandishness | n. The quality of being strikingly out of the ordinary; the quality of being outlandish{ 2 }. |
| outlandishly | (adv) in an outlandish manner, Example: the Bavarian was outlandishly dressed in lederhosen |
| outlandishness | (n) strikingly out of the ordinary, Syn. weirdness, bizarreness |