English

edit

Etymology

edit

From out +‎ guard.

Noun

edit

outguard (plural outguards)

  1. (military) A guard or small body of troops at a distance from the main body of an army, to watch for the approach of an enemy.
  2. (by extension) Anything for defense placed at a distance from the thing to be defended.

Verb

edit

outguard (third-person singular simple present outguards, present participle outguarding, simple past and past participle outguarded)

  1. To serve as an outguard at.
    • 1962 May-June, Stuart A. Beckley, “"Operation Kadesh", Mobility Masterpiece”, in Armor, page 60:
      The defense complex itself, not unlike that organized in and around Abu Ageila, consisted of several batallion strongpoints outguarded and flank protected by platoon, detachment, and company sized units.
    • 1992, S. L. A Marshall, The Fields of Bamboo:
      To most of them Dong Tre was only a place somewhere other than the port that they outguarded.
    • 1997, Dr. Hargis Westefield, Joe Murphy, “Infighting at Sanananda”, in 41st Infantry Division: Fighting Jungleers, page xxxix:
      Slanting in echelon NE, the three Jap perimeters outguarded four P Perimeters some distance south which had defeated the Aussie tank attack 12 Jan.
  2. To do a better job of guarding than.
    • 1921, The Colorado School of Mines Magazine - Volumes 11-13, page 22:
      He outguessed, outscored, and outguarded the Tiger, though the latter in a guard position showed that he was a real basketball man.
    • 1991, Illinois. General Assembly. Senate, Journal of the Senate, page 2421:
      Whereas, the Bulls outgunned, outguarded and outplayed the Los Angeles Lakers Wednesday, June 12, to claim their fourth victory in the best-of seven series for the National Basketball Association title; []
    • 2008, Dick Burdette, The Waterloo Wonders, page 171:
      The Wildcats outplayed, outfought, outgarded and, greatest of all, outscored Waterloo.