Outward vs Egressive - What's the difference?
outward | egressive |
outer; located towards the outside
visible, noticeable
Tending to the exterior or outside.
* Dryden
(obsolete) Foreign; not civil or intestine.
Towards the outside; away from the centre.
:We are outward bound.
*Shakespeare
*:The wrong side may be turned outward .
(obsolete) Outwardly, in outer appearances; publicly.
*:
*:ANd thenne the quene lete make a preuy dyner in london vnto the kny?tes of the round table / and al was for to shewe outward that she had as grete Ioye in al other knyghtes of the table round as she had in sir launcelot / al only at that dyner she had sir Gawayne and his bretheren
(obsolete, rare) To ward off; to keep out.
* 1596 , (Edmund Spenser), The Faerie Queene , V.1:
Going or directed outward.
(phonetics, of a speech sound) Uttered by pushing air out through the mouth or nose.
(geology) descriptive of a place or channel through which something such as water or lava leaves an area.
(phonetics) A speech sound in which the air stream is created by pushing air out through the mouth or nose.
As adjectives the difference between outward and egressive
is that outward is outer; located towards the outside while egressive is going or directed outward.As an adverb outward
is towards the outside; away from the centre.As a verb outward
is (obsolete|rare) to ward off; to keep out.As a noun egressive is
(phonetics) a speech sound in which the air stream is created by pushing air out through the mouth or nose.outward
English
Etymology 1
From (etyl), from (etyl)Adjective
(en adjective)- By all outward indications, he's a normal happy child, but if you talk to him, you will soon realize he has some psychological problems.
- The fire will force its outward way.
- an outward war
- (Hayward)
Adverb
(en adverb)Synonyms
* outwardsDerived terms
* outwardnessEtymology 2
From .Verb
(en verb)- Ne any armour could his dint out-ward ; / But wheresoever it did light, it throughly shard.
Anagrams
* *egressive
English
(wikipedia egressive)Adjective
(head)- This ancient wash was an egressive channel that once drained a lake .