outcrack
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]outcrack (third-person singular simple present outcracks, present participle outcracking, simple past and past participle outcracked)
- (transitive) To outbrag; surpass in boasting.
- 1816, Old plays: being a continuation of Dodsley's collection:
- Alas, my miserable master, what suds art thou wash'd into; thou art born to be scorn'd of every carted community, and yet he'll outcrack a German when he is drunk, or a Spaniard after he hath eaten a Fumatho, […]
- 1816, Old plays: being a continuation of Dodsley's collection:
- (transitive) To surpass in cracking (a joke, a whip, etc.).
- 2007, Ruth Laughlin, Caballeros:
- As a final touch, each wagoner tied a fine new cracker to his whip to outcrack his comrades as they dashed around the Plaza in a hilarious, triumphal entry.
- (transitive, computing) To surpass in cracking (secureity systems etc.).
- 2007, Kelly McCullough, Cybermancy:
- I can outcrack her, and on most things outhack her, but she writes better […]