outnumber
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Pronunciation
[edit]- IPA(key): /aʊtˈnʌmbə(ɹ)/
Audio (Southern England): (file)
Verb
[edit]outnumber (third-person singular simple present outnumbers, present participle outnumbering, simple past and past participle outnumbered)
- (transitive, stative) To be more in number than somebody or something.
- Women outnumbered men by two to one.
- 1960 September, P. Ransome-Wallis, “Modern motive power of the German Federal Railways: Part One”, in Trains Illustrated, page 553:
- There are 105 D.B. Type "23" engines and they were intended to replace the famous Prussian "P8" class 4-6-0s (Type "38"), but dieselisation prevented further construction and they are greatly outnumbered by the thousand or so "P8s" which are still in service and which can be seen on a great variety of duties.
- 1999 January 10, Edward Said, “The One-State Solution”, in The New York Times Magazine[1]:
- Vastly outnumbering the Jews, Palestinian Arabs during the period after the 1917 Balfour Declaration and the British Mandate always refused anything that would compromise their dominance.
- 2007 October 14, Frank Rich, “The ‘Good Germans’ Among Us”, in The New York Times[2]:
- When reports surfaced early this summer that our contractors in Iraq (180,000, of whom some 48,000 are believed to be security personnel) now outnumber our postsurge troop strength, we yawned.
- 2013, Brian Hurwitz, “Healthcare Serial Killings: Was the Case of Dr Harold Shipman Unthinkable?”, in Danielle Griffiths, Andrew Sanders, editors, Bioethics, Medicine and the Criminal Law (Cambridge Bioethics and Law), volumes 2 (Medicine, Crime and Society), Cambridge, Cambridgeshire: Cambridge University Press, →ISBN, page 19:
- The striking aspect of clinicide is the scale of suspicious deaths with which it is associated, which outnumbers proven murders by an order of magnitude (in [Harold] Shipman's case, a factor of , a figure that only hints at the enormous interpersonal disruption and family grief which follows in its wake.
Translations
[edit]be more in number
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