英:[aʊt'li:p]
美:[aʊt'lip]
英:[aʊt'li:p]
美:[aʊt'lip]
noun
a surge of feeling, activity, or growth : outburst
He felt an outleap of interest and compassion toward her …—George Eliot
verb
transitive verb
to outdo in leaping : outjump Most species of hares, the snowshoe being an exception, live in more open habitat than rabbits and tend to outleap and outrun predators.—John O. Whitaker, Jr.
… Tillman outleaped the receiver for the slightly underthrown pass …—Nunyo Demasio
The first known use of outleap was in the 14th century
1 Tight end Mo Alie-Cox made two touchdown catches during a red zone 7-on-7 period, using his size to outleap Lions defenders.
2 For years, a huge photograph of Obrovac outleaping Abdul-Jabbar and tipping it to a teammate occupied a prominent place in the concourse at University of Dayton Arena.
3 Eastwood’s artistry, his cinematic unconscious, imbues this pugnacious drama with urgent present-day observations that outleap its historical context—and maybe even his intentions.
4 Sutton tracked the ball, outleaping cornerback Denzel Ward, who was right in Sutton’s hip pocket.
5 Webb – all 6-foot-6 of him – outleaped a much smaller Auburn defender and made a jump-ball catch for the touchdown and a 14-3 lead.
6 And Jackson, whom Samuel outleaped, is a rookie fifth-round pick.
7 Vikings cornerback Chris Cook found out how difficult Jeffery could be to defend as Jeffery burned him for an 80-yard touchdown and later outleaped him and reached around him in the end zone for a 46-yard circus catch for a score.
8 Tittle then threw a 41-yard bomb to rookie halfback R.C. Owens, who outleaped Jack Christiansen and Jim David in the end zone for the winning score with 10 seconds left.