outdin
English
Alternative forms
- out-din
Verb
outdin (third-person singular simple present outdins, present participle outdinning, simple past and past participle outdinned)
- To din more loudly than, make a louder noise than (someone or something).
- 1664, James Howell, Florus Hungaricus, London: Hen[ry] Marsh, Book 2, p. 49,
- […] divine Providence was pleased by these frequent and ruinous losses and slaughters, upon the neck of one another, to bring these barbarous Huns to an humble sense of their calamitous and ruinous condition, and by that prepare and soften their minds to the Reception of the great Evangelicall truth, against whose Innocent Doctrine, the applauses of their Triumphs and the noising loud Fame of their puissance and successe had out-dinn’d the Trumpets of the Prince of Peace […]
- 1845, Thomas Cooper, The Purgatory of Suicides. A Prison-Rhyme, London: Jeremiah How, Book 2, Stanza 50, p. 67:
- Anon, came on a crew that swift outsped,
And soon outdinned with more relentless curse,
This bitter cursing crowd.
- 1900, Richard Hovey, “When the Priest Left” in Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey, Last Songs from Vagabondia, Boston: Small, Maynard & Co., 1903, p. 53,
- What did he say?
- To seek love otherwhere
- Nor bind the soul to clay?
- It may be so—I cannot tell—
- But I know that life is fair,
- And love’s bold clarion in the air
- Outdins his little vesper-bell.
- 1664, James Howell, Florus Hungaricus, London: Hen[ry] Marsh, Book 2, p. 49,
Synonyms
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