释义 |
Definition of outdistance in English: outdistanceverb aʊtˈdɪst(ə)nsˌaʊtˈdɪstəns [with object]Leave (a competitor or pursuer) far behind. she could maintain a fast enough pace to outdistance any pursuers Example sentencesExamples - The difficulty is to be settled not by trying to write poetry that the Philistines can understand but by outdistancing them in the very race they have set.
- He appeared to be moving no faster than before with no more effort but, still, they needed to move at a fairly brisk pace to not be outdistanced by him.
- Benchmarking your business against industry peers, however, will help you to understand your own competitive position in the marketplace and will help you to design strategies to outdistance your competitors.
- She started her takeoff run, easily outdistancing her pursuers.
- Sally took his advice, sprinting past him down the corridor, easily outdistancing him.
- Polls show that he is outdistancing both Democratic primary contenders.
- He didn't even notice Peter and the others fall into line behind him, even as he outdistanced them.
- With pizza outdistancing hamburgers and frankfurters in the race for the consumer dollar, pizza production is soaring.
- Despite its waxings and wanings under the impact of barbarian outsurges and imperial rises and falls, it created a kind of economic international system that far outdistanced any political one.
- From there, the race is on, as you have to catch up to and outdistance your rival.
- He liked the idea; he could relate to how these women always felt, trying to outdistance the bill collector, never having roots.
- He had just outdistanced his surprisingly fast pursuers when he passed under a pedestrian overpass.
- It documents, for example, how the super-rich are outdistancing everyone else.
- The leading authors cited 14 of his articles, outdistancing all other authors.
- Once one standard emerges as a clear favorite among users, it will quickly outdistance its rivals.
- By various means she comes up with the cash, and begins training, quickly outdistancing her brother, who would rather be an artist anyway.
- Our one chance is to run like the lightning and hope we survive long enough to outdistance the storm.
- He had prided himself on being a strong swimmer, even for an elf, but this girl was easily outdistancing him.
- First, the growth of data transmission is far outdistancing the growth of international voice traffic.
- Some are accomplished leapers and bounders, avoiding predation by outdistancing the predator.
Synonyms outrun, outstrip, run faster than, outpace, leave behind, get (further) ahead of, gain on, draw away from, overtake, pass, shake off, throw off, lose, put distance between oneself and someone else, widen the gap between oneself and someone else surpass, outshine, do better than, outclass, outdo, excel, exceed, transcend, top, cap, trump, beat, better, leave behind, lead informal leave standing, walk away from archaic outrival, outvie
Rhymes assistance, coexistence, consistence, distance, existence, insistence, persistence, resistance, subsistence Definition of outdistance in US English: outdistanceverbˌaʊtˈdɪstənsˌoutˈdistəns [with object]Leave (a competitor or pursuer) far behind. she could maintain a fast enough pace to outdistance any pursuers Example sentencesExamples - Sally took his advice, sprinting past him down the corridor, easily outdistancing him.
- He had just outdistanced his surprisingly fast pursuers when he passed under a pedestrian overpass.
- Some are accomplished leapers and bounders, avoiding predation by outdistancing the predator.
- First, the growth of data transmission is far outdistancing the growth of international voice traffic.
- Polls show that he is outdistancing both Democratic primary contenders.
- From there, the race is on, as you have to catch up to and outdistance your rival.
- He didn't even notice Peter and the others fall into line behind him, even as he outdistanced them.
- He liked the idea; he could relate to how these women always felt, trying to outdistance the bill collector, never having roots.
- The difficulty is to be settled not by trying to write poetry that the Philistines can understand but by outdistancing them in the very race they have set.
- It documents, for example, how the super-rich are outdistancing everyone else.
- He had prided himself on being a strong swimmer, even for an elf, but this girl was easily outdistancing him.
- With pizza outdistancing hamburgers and frankfurters in the race for the consumer dollar, pizza production is soaring.
- He appeared to be moving no faster than before with no more effort but, still, they needed to move at a fairly brisk pace to not be outdistanced by him.
- Our one chance is to run like the lightning and hope we survive long enough to outdistance the storm.
- She started her takeoff run, easily outdistancing her pursuers.
- The leading authors cited 14 of his articles, outdistancing all other authors.
- Benchmarking your business against industry peers, however, will help you to understand your own competitive position in the marketplace and will help you to design strategies to outdistance your competitors.
- By various means she comes up with the cash, and begins training, quickly outdistancing her brother, who would rather be an artist anyway.
- Once one standard emerges as a clear favorite among users, it will quickly outdistance its rivals.
- Despite its waxings and wanings under the impact of barbarian outsurges and imperial rises and falls, it created a kind of economic international system that far outdistanced any political one.
Synonyms outrun, outstrip, run faster than, outpace, leave behind, get ahead of, get further ahead of, gain on, draw away from, overtake, pass, shake off, throw off, lose, put distance between oneself and someone else, widen the gap between oneself and someone else surpass, outshine, do better than, outclass, outdo, excel, exceed, transcend, top, cap, trump, beat, better, leave behind, lead |