释义 |
ˈoutˌgoer [out- 8.] One who goes out (in various senses: see go v. 87); esp. one who goes out of a place, office, occupation, or tenancy; a player, at cricket or the like, who is dismissed.
1382Wyclif 1 Sam. xxii. 17 The kyng seith to the out⁓goers [Vulg. emissariis] in his nedis. 1816J. Scott Vis. Paris (ed. 5) 25 To take cognizance of incomers and out⁓goers. 1827J. W. Croker in C. Papers 31 Dec. (1884), The King is exceedingly vexed at the outgoers, and will not take them but on compulsion. 1861Jrnl. R. Agric. Soc. XXII. ii. 325 Mutual accommodation between incomer and outgoer. 1883Daily Tel. 15 May 2/7 The outgoer had made 9. 1888Daily News 22 Sept. 5/1 Of yore [at golf] there was but one set of holes, not a double set for out-goers and incomers. |