v
(obsolete) To draw towards evening.
v
(transitive) To gain the support of (a person) through bribery.
v
(transitive) To triumph over (someone).
v
To overlook from a height.
v
(idiomatic) To exaggerate; to tell tall tales.
v
(intransitive) To predominate.
v
(transitive) To surpass someone or something; to be better or do better than someone or something.
v
To go too far forward; overshoot.
v
(archaic, transitive) To do wrong to; injure; scathe.
v
(intransitive, rare, Scotland, Northern England, obsolete) To degenerate (into); become (something inferior); come to.
v
(transitive, rare, dialectal or archaic) To set over against; oppose.
v
(transitive, idiomatic) To overwhelm or overcome
v
To outdo somebody; to do something that surpasses what came before.
v
Alternative form of go over like a lead balloon [(simile) To fail to gain acceptance: to be received poorly.]
v
(transitive) To promote heavily; to advertise or build up.
n
(informal) The situation in which a business fails to foresee changes within its industry and drops from a market-dominant position to being a minor player or declares bankruptcy.
v
To use force to make progress, especially physical force.
n
An encroachment beyond proper limits.
v
Alternative form of outgo [(archaic) To go further than (someone or something); to exceed, to go beyond, to surpass.]
v
(transitive) To surpass in achievement; to achieve more than.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To endure beyond; to outlast.
v
(transitive, archaic) To edge out.
v
(transitive) To exercise more or better than.
v
(transitive) To finish ahead of; to defeat or surpass by finishing first.
v
(transitive) To surpass in gaming; to defeat in a game.
v
(obsolete) To go too far; to overextend or overreach.
v
(transitive) To invest (money) better or more profitably than.
v
(transitive) To exceed in leadership.
v
(transitive, rare) To lie outside, or at the extremes or periphery of.
v
(transitive) To surpass in duration; outlast.
v
(transitive) To surpass or exceed.
v
(transitive) To surpass in planning.
v
(transitive) To surpass in plotting or scheming.
v
(transitive) To surpass in computer programming ability.
v
(transitive) To reach further than.
v
(transitive) To surpass in searching.
v
(transitive) To soar beyond or above.
v
(transitive, poetic) To strain or filter outward.
v
(transitive) To survive longer than; to outlive.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To exceed in swelling.
v
(transitive) To surpass in turning; to turn better than.
v
(transitive) To surpass or outstrip in flying.
v
To work faster or harder than.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To carry over.
v
(obsolete) To overflow; to surcharge.
v
(transitive, archaic) To attain, reach; pass, overtake; come up with; get hold of, catch.
v
(obsolete) To overtake, go faster than.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To overtake.
n
One who, or that which, overlaps.
n
The act of one who overlards.
v
(transitive, gambling) To bet too much money on.
v
(transitive, obsolete) To dominate; domineer over; oppress.
v
To be more than equal to or a match for, to surpass; hence, to conquer, vanquish.
v
(transitive, archaic) To overtake; seize.
v
(intransitive) To park (a vehicle) for longer than is permitted.
v
(figuratively) To rise above.
v
(transitive) To subdue someone by superior force.
v
(video games) To lure away more monsters than one can handle in combat.
v
(transitive) To overthrow; subdue.
v
(transitive, property law) To defeat or override a person's interest in property; (Britain, specifically) of a holder of the legal title of real property: by mortgaging or selling the legal title to a third party, to cause another person's equitable right in the property to be dissolved and to be replaced by an equitable right in the money received from the third party.
v
Obsolete form of overrun. [To defeat an enemy and invade in great numbers, seizing the enemy positions conclusively.]
v
To go beyond; to extend in part beyond.
v
(obsolete) To fail to see; to overlook, ignore.
v
(transitive) To dominate something and make it seem insignificant.
n
One who, or that which, overshadows.
v
(transitive, nonstandard) To oversee; to supervise.
v
(archaic) To neglect, omit; to desist, refrain from, forbear
v
(transitive) to stand too strictly on the demands or conditions of.
v
(obsolete, reflexive) To overreach oneself while striking.
v
To overpower, overwhelm.
v
To occur unexpectedly; take by surprise; surprise and overcome; carry away
v
(transitive, obsolete) To overcome with long lack of rest.
v
(transitive, UK dialectal) To overcome; gain one's point; exceed.
v
(transitive, archaic) To wrest or force from the natural or proper position.
v
To provide extra needed resources.
v
(intransitive) To exceed in weight or influence; hence, to predominate.
v
To try to get (something) by extending one's arm or moving one's hand.
v
(intransitive) To extend one's hand(s) forward.
v
To extend beyond (something).
v
(transitive, rare) To rise above; to overtop; to cover.
v
(intransitive, obsolete, with of, with) To supererogate (in any sense) in the service of the prepositional argument.
n
(obsolete) The act of leaping on anything.
n
The act or process by which something is surpassed; a bettering.
v
To cause visible strain to.
v
To excel, to surpass, to beat, to exceed.
v
(transitive) To exceed or overstep some limit or boundary.
v
(transitive) To outweigh; be stronger, greater, bigger than or in other way superior to.
v
(idiomatic) Heavily publicise, promote or market a product.
v
To strain; to subject to excessive tests.
v
(transitive, nonstandard) To submit; submit to; subvene
v
(transitive, obsolete) To put under, subject.
v
(obsolete, transitive) To put or send under.
v
(transitive) To see or look under or below; see below the surface of.
v
(transitive) To send beneath, under, or through; submit.
v
(transitive) To injure by working secretly; to destroy or overthrow by clandestine measure; to undermine.
v
(obsolete, intransitive) To hurt; to ache.
Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook
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based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some
of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the
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every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be
missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their
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