Meaning of outroad | Babel Free
Definitions
-
An excursion. obsolete
-
A foray into an enemy's territory, especially a hostile attack. obsolete
- A way out from a place or situation.
Examples
“As he was speaking this, the perceived six hudred and threescore light horsemen, gallantly mounted, who made an outroad thither to see what ship it was that was newly arrived in the harbour, and came in a full gallop to take them if they had been able.”
“for it would be too great a cruelty if, contrary to all orders and decrees of death, he should go about to make show of him in Castile the old, where in good sooth he lieth within a sepulchre, laid all along, and unable to make a third journey and a new outroad.”
“On a day, some miles above Knockfergus, near a creek where the Irish had a castle, Major Ballantine, with some few of our Scots horse, had an outroad, where they perceived a fellow land in a boat from a little ship within sight of shore.”
“The territory around this bay was held for a time by Keiani the Scot's sonnes, until they were driven out by Cuneda, the Cambro-Briton, and is now counted part of the inheritance of the Cutchy of Lancaster, byt the heires of Maurice of London, or De Londres, who, making an outroad hither out of Glamorganshire, after a dangerous war, made himself master hereof, and fortified old Kidwelly with a wall and castle to it, which now for very age is growen to decay, and standeth, as it were, forlet and forlorne;”
“So that we have to sweep laboriously the Morawa-Taya Valleys; and undertake first one and then another outroad, or sharp swift sally, against those troublesome barbarians.”
“On the other hand the outroad to Africa had a good prospect of success, if enough forces could be landed in the country .”
“Things have calmed down since then, and we've accepted fairly pragmatically that neither approach makes a lick of sense, that synthesis is the necessary outroad.”
“The dark energy of metal music appeared as a seductive outroad from that island of discontent on which most teens in the early Eighties felt stranded-where one's hometown seemed like a stifling armpit of civilization.”
“Upon this outroad, however, yet another conceptual plateau arises from within the relaxed coil of ecstasy and madness, one that will consolidate all heretofore delineated aspects in a single sound: namely, that of laughter.”
“One of those patterns would be disrupted intentionally when a group of family campers and I dared ourselves, and thus met the dare, to walk down that same two-trek, through the tunnel of trees to the dump, then back out another outroad, a quarter mile on the other side.”
“This is a winding task (to recruit the ungoverned), one that demarcates an ever-lengthening outroad to damnation.”
CEFR level
B1
Intermediate
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.
This word is part of the CEFR B1 vocabulary — intermediate level.