English edit

Etymology edit

From out- +‎ scout.

Verb edit

outscout (third-person singular simple present outscouts, present participle outscouting, simple past and past participle outscouted)

  1. (transitive) To surpass in scouting, or reconnaissance.
    • 1900, A[rthur] Conan Doyle, “The Siege of Mafeking”, in The Great Boer War, London: Smith, Elder, & Co., [], →OCLC, page 404:
      In the Matabele campaign he had out[-]scouted the savage scouts and found his pleasure in tracking them among their native mountains, []
    • 2002, Scott Simon, chapter 2, in Jackie Robinson and the Integration of Baseball[1], Hoboken, NJ: John Wiley, page 29:
      A major league owner in Brooklyn, St. Louis or Chicago might not be able to outscout and outspend the Yankees. But he could find and sign gifted ballplayers in places the Yankees ignored.
  2. (transitive, obsolete) To overpower by disdain; to outface.

Noun edit

outscout (plural outscouts)

  1. (obsolete) An advance scout.
    • 1728, Daniel Defoe (attributed), The Memoirs of an English Officer, London: E. Symon, pp. 211-212,[2]
      [] tho’ the Enemy took the Train I had laid, and on sight of our small Body on the Hill, sent a Party from their greater Body to intercept them, before they could reach the Town; yet the Sequel prov’d, we had mistaken their Number, and it soon appeared to be much greater than we at first imagin’d. However our Out-scouts, as I may call ’em, got safe into the House []
    • 1803, Robert Charles Dallas, The History of the Maroons[3], London: Longman and Rees, Volume 1, Letter 2, p. 41:
      [They] lay covered by the underwood, and behind rocks and roots of trees, waiting in silent ambush for their pursuers, of whose approach they had always information from their out-scouts.
  2. (obsolete) A group of advance scouts; an advance scouting party.
    • 1707, William Funnell, chapter 3, in A Voyage Round the World[4], London: James Knapton, page 42:
      As soon as they approached near the Town, the two Indians which were in the Canoa with our five Men for the Out-scout, jumped over-board, and we lost them.
    • 1744, Peter Wraxall, entry dated 17 May, 1744, in Charles Howard McIlwain (ed.), An Abridgment of the Indian Affairs, Harvard University Press, 1915, p. 232,[5]
      [] they think it absolutely necessary that an outscout of 40 Men should be sent at the charge of the Province to the Carrying Place [] to observe the Motions of the Enemy []
    • 1754, Conrad Weiser, journal entry dated 3 September, 1754, in The Life of (John) Conrad Weiser, Reading, PA: Daniel Miller, 1876, p. 350,[6]
      [] Tanacharisson [] complained very much of the behavior of Colonel Washington to him [] saying that he took upon him to command the Indians as his slaves, and would have them every day upon the outscout and attack the enemy by themselves, and that he would by no means take advice from the Indians []

Anagrams edit