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outbalance
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outbalance
outbalance, v. (aʊtˈbæləns) [out- 18 b.] trans. To outweigh, to exceed in weight or effect.1644 Milton Judgm. Bucer To Parlt., The Autority..of this man consulted with, is able to out-ballance all that the lightnes of a vulgar opposition can bring to counterpoise. 1772 Town & Country Mag. 123 Her pa...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Clarence Ray Allen
from him because he was behind bars and yet he continued to perpetrate these types of crimes and none of the factors that they cite now overshadow or outbalance
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Danger Route
The New York Times said "the author has narrative vigour and a great deal of ingenuity in small details which is probably enough to outbalance his liberal
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out-
out- in comb. is used with substantives, with verbs and their derivatives, and with other adverbs. In OE. {uacu}t adv. was already prefixed (1) to ordinary ns. in the sense ‘that is without’, ‘out-lying’, ‘external’, as in {uacu}tland a country that is out, a distant or foreign land, {uacu}there an ...
Oxford English Dictionary
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National Republican Air Force
From mid-1944, the casualty ratio started to outbalance the victories of the Italian pilots.
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Encantadia
Without him, nothing will be destroyed and that will outbalance the World of Encantadia. Everything he touches gets destroyed.
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Waterloo, Nova Scotia
Many Acadians were expelled in 1755 and these German Protestant immigrants initially were the new population sought to outbalance the French and Mi'kmaq
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History of Cologne
In this way, the last, possibly too simple-minded attempt, to outbalance the schism in the empire, proved to be a complete failure.
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