Re: 'Sorry, no results for “outwest” in the English dictionary.' So, it's not an acknowledged word then? Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Do native English speakers use the word “touristic”?Is the word “comparator” widely used outside of IT and computing — say, in statistics?Why is “crowdness” not a proper English word?Better use of the word “sorry”Is it correct to use “git” as verb?Evolution of the word “dick”Using “nonexempt” in different contextsCan I be intolerant of milk even if it's not a medical issue for me?Word for what a “handyman” does?Is 'stakehold' (used as a noun) an acceptable word, even though no major dictionary lists it?

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Re: 'Sorry, no results for “outwest” in the English dictionary.' So, it's not an acknowledged word then?



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 17/18, 2019 at 00:00UTC (8:00pm US/Eastern)Do native English speakers use the word “touristic”?Is the word “comparator” widely used outside of IT and computing — say, in statistics?Why is “crowdness” not a proper English word?Better use of the word “sorry”Is it correct to use “git” as verb?Evolution of the word “dick”Using “nonexempt” in different contextsCan I be intolerant of milk even if it's not a medical issue for me?Word for what a “handyman” does?Is 'stakehold' (used as a noun) an acceptable word, even though no major dictionary lists it?



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















Re: "outwest"



Google search: About 496,000 results (the first 10 pages showing business names, except a street name and a hashtag).



Google search: "outwest meaning" --> "Did you mean: out west meaning"



Other search results for "outwest" (from dictionaries):



  1. M-W: out West (idiom; variant: out west).


  2. ODO: No exact matches found for "outwest" (nearest result: out West).


  3. American Heritage: No word definition found.


  4. Cambridge Dictionary: "words with similar spellings or pronunciations" (out west, southwest, outcast...).


  5. Chambers: Sorry, no entries for outwest were found.


  6. Collins: Sorry, no results for "outwest" in the English Dictionary. (Did you mean: outwrest, outjest, outwent...).


Based on that, I guess outwest is not an acknowledged word. I suppose some people and outfitters use it because western sounds sort of old-timey (e.g., outwest outfit vs. western outfit). But I don't have access to the OED, not yet.



Question: Is outwest listed as an actual word in some source (not included in the ones I have listed above)?



Or is it considered idiomatic only by those who sell (or buy) a lot of steaks and/or boots, for example?










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    Never heard of it- and I live out West. I suppose someone living all the way on the West Coast can outwest me, though.

    – Jim
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    It is obviously an English word, but I have never come across it and have no idea what it means (well I do now). Presumably it is dialect or jargon in too small a group to meet the requirements for entry in general dictionaries.

    – James Random
    6 hours ago











  • I believe the correct spelling is two words and not one as it shows in the first dictionary "M-W", which I assume is Marrion-Webster.

    – Karlomanio
    5 hours ago











  • "out West" two words, just like "back East".

    – Centaurus
    5 hours ago







  • 1





    Where have you seen this word? Some context would help with determining if it is a nonce usage, a subculture, or just a mistake. Why do you think it is a 'word'? Do you use it normally? And do you trust all the google entries it found?

    – Mitch
    5 hours ago


















1















Re: "outwest"



Google search: About 496,000 results (the first 10 pages showing business names, except a street name and a hashtag).



Google search: "outwest meaning" --> "Did you mean: out west meaning"



Other search results for "outwest" (from dictionaries):



  1. M-W: out West (idiom; variant: out west).


  2. ODO: No exact matches found for "outwest" (nearest result: out West).


  3. American Heritage: No word definition found.


  4. Cambridge Dictionary: "words with similar spellings or pronunciations" (out west, southwest, outcast...).


  5. Chambers: Sorry, no entries for outwest were found.


  6. Collins: Sorry, no results for "outwest" in the English Dictionary. (Did you mean: outwrest, outjest, outwent...).


Based on that, I guess outwest is not an acknowledged word. I suppose some people and outfitters use it because western sounds sort of old-timey (e.g., outwest outfit vs. western outfit). But I don't have access to the OED, not yet.



Question: Is outwest listed as an actual word in some source (not included in the ones I have listed above)?



Or is it considered idiomatic only by those who sell (or buy) a lot of steaks and/or boots, for example?










share|improve this question



















  • 5





    Never heard of it- and I live out West. I suppose someone living all the way on the West Coast can outwest me, though.

    – Jim
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    It is obviously an English word, but I have never come across it and have no idea what it means (well I do now). Presumably it is dialect or jargon in too small a group to meet the requirements for entry in general dictionaries.

    – James Random
    6 hours ago











  • I believe the correct spelling is two words and not one as it shows in the first dictionary "M-W", which I assume is Marrion-Webster.

    – Karlomanio
    5 hours ago











  • "out West" two words, just like "back East".

    – Centaurus
    5 hours ago







  • 1





    Where have you seen this word? Some context would help with determining if it is a nonce usage, a subculture, or just a mistake. Why do you think it is a 'word'? Do you use it normally? And do you trust all the google entries it found?

    – Mitch
    5 hours ago














1












1








1








Re: "outwest"



Google search: About 496,000 results (the first 10 pages showing business names, except a street name and a hashtag).



Google search: "outwest meaning" --> "Did you mean: out west meaning"



Other search results for "outwest" (from dictionaries):



  1. M-W: out West (idiom; variant: out west).


  2. ODO: No exact matches found for "outwest" (nearest result: out West).


  3. American Heritage: No word definition found.


  4. Cambridge Dictionary: "words with similar spellings or pronunciations" (out west, southwest, outcast...).


  5. Chambers: Sorry, no entries for outwest were found.


  6. Collins: Sorry, no results for "outwest" in the English Dictionary. (Did you mean: outwrest, outjest, outwent...).


Based on that, I guess outwest is not an acknowledged word. I suppose some people and outfitters use it because western sounds sort of old-timey (e.g., outwest outfit vs. western outfit). But I don't have access to the OED, not yet.



Question: Is outwest listed as an actual word in some source (not included in the ones I have listed above)?



Or is it considered idiomatic only by those who sell (or buy) a lot of steaks and/or boots, for example?










share|improve this question
















Re: "outwest"



Google search: About 496,000 results (the first 10 pages showing business names, except a street name and a hashtag).



Google search: "outwest meaning" --> "Did you mean: out west meaning"



Other search results for "outwest" (from dictionaries):



  1. M-W: out West (idiom; variant: out west).


  2. ODO: No exact matches found for "outwest" (nearest result: out West).


  3. American Heritage: No word definition found.


  4. Cambridge Dictionary: "words with similar spellings or pronunciations" (out west, southwest, outcast...).


  5. Chambers: Sorry, no entries for outwest were found.


  6. Collins: Sorry, no results for "outwest" in the English Dictionary. (Did you mean: outwrest, outjest, outwent...).


Based on that, I guess outwest is not an acknowledged word. I suppose some people and outfitters use it because western sounds sort of old-timey (e.g., outwest outfit vs. western outfit). But I don't have access to the OED, not yet.



Question: Is outwest listed as an actual word in some source (not included in the ones I have listed above)?



Or is it considered idiomatic only by those who sell (or buy) a lot of steaks and/or boots, for example?







word-usage






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 2 hours ago







KannE

















asked 6 hours ago









KannEKannE

1,191219




1,191219







  • 5





    Never heard of it- and I live out West. I suppose someone living all the way on the West Coast can outwest me, though.

    – Jim
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    It is obviously an English word, but I have never come across it and have no idea what it means (well I do now). Presumably it is dialect or jargon in too small a group to meet the requirements for entry in general dictionaries.

    – James Random
    6 hours ago











  • I believe the correct spelling is two words and not one as it shows in the first dictionary "M-W", which I assume is Marrion-Webster.

    – Karlomanio
    5 hours ago











  • "out West" two words, just like "back East".

    – Centaurus
    5 hours ago







  • 1





    Where have you seen this word? Some context would help with determining if it is a nonce usage, a subculture, or just a mistake. Why do you think it is a 'word'? Do you use it normally? And do you trust all the google entries it found?

    – Mitch
    5 hours ago













  • 5





    Never heard of it- and I live out West. I suppose someone living all the way on the West Coast can outwest me, though.

    – Jim
    6 hours ago







  • 1





    It is obviously an English word, but I have never come across it and have no idea what it means (well I do now). Presumably it is dialect or jargon in too small a group to meet the requirements for entry in general dictionaries.

    – James Random
    6 hours ago











  • I believe the correct spelling is two words and not one as it shows in the first dictionary "M-W", which I assume is Marrion-Webster.

    – Karlomanio
    5 hours ago











  • "out West" two words, just like "back East".

    – Centaurus
    5 hours ago







  • 1





    Where have you seen this word? Some context would help with determining if it is a nonce usage, a subculture, or just a mistake. Why do you think it is a 'word'? Do you use it normally? And do you trust all the google entries it found?

    – Mitch
    5 hours ago








5




5





Never heard of it- and I live out West. I suppose someone living all the way on the West Coast can outwest me, though.

– Jim
6 hours ago






Never heard of it- and I live out West. I suppose someone living all the way on the West Coast can outwest me, though.

– Jim
6 hours ago





1




1





It is obviously an English word, but I have never come across it and have no idea what it means (well I do now). Presumably it is dialect or jargon in too small a group to meet the requirements for entry in general dictionaries.

– James Random
6 hours ago





It is obviously an English word, but I have never come across it and have no idea what it means (well I do now). Presumably it is dialect or jargon in too small a group to meet the requirements for entry in general dictionaries.

– James Random
6 hours ago













I believe the correct spelling is two words and not one as it shows in the first dictionary "M-W", which I assume is Marrion-Webster.

– Karlomanio
5 hours ago





I believe the correct spelling is two words and not one as it shows in the first dictionary "M-W", which I assume is Marrion-Webster.

– Karlomanio
5 hours ago













"out West" two words, just like "back East".

– Centaurus
5 hours ago






"out West" two words, just like "back East".

– Centaurus
5 hours ago





1




1





Where have you seen this word? Some context would help with determining if it is a nonce usage, a subculture, or just a mistake. Why do you think it is a 'word'? Do you use it normally? And do you trust all the google entries it found?

– Mitch
5 hours ago






Where have you seen this word? Some context would help with determining if it is a nonce usage, a subculture, or just a mistake. Why do you think it is a 'word'? Do you use it normally? And do you trust all the google entries it found?

– Mitch
5 hours ago











2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















1














As you suspect, "outwest" is not a real word.




"out West", two words, means "in the western part of the United States". NTC's AID




e.g. "I lived out West for ten years."



In the US you will also hear:



  • back East (refers mainly to the American Northeast, the New England states)

  • up North

  • down South

Even those who have never been to the American Northeast, North, or South, may occasionally use these phrases. e.g. "My son went to college back East."






share|improve this answer
































    1














    "Outwest" is not a common term, but I have read it a few times. Obviously, it may sometimes represent simply a combination of "out" and "west" in "normal" (if perhaps erroneous) construction. Eg, "The Rockies are outwest."



    But it is sometimes used as a noun, where "the outwest" (likely to be capitalized as either "Outwest" or "OutWest") means roughly the same as "the west" (in the sense of the western US).



    And the term is also used as sort of adjective, with a flavor similar to "western", as noted in the original question. I suspect the intent is to avoid the "Cowboys and Indians" connotation of "western", and to make it seem more "edgy".



    Unfortunately, searching for this term is a challenge, as there is (or was) a literary magazine, several businesses, and even at least one town named "Outwest".






    share|improve this answer























      Your Answer








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      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes








      2 Answers
      2






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      1














      As you suspect, "outwest" is not a real word.




      "out West", two words, means "in the western part of the United States". NTC's AID




      e.g. "I lived out West for ten years."



      In the US you will also hear:



      • back East (refers mainly to the American Northeast, the New England states)

      • up North

      • down South

      Even those who have never been to the American Northeast, North, or South, may occasionally use these phrases. e.g. "My son went to college back East."






      share|improve this answer





























        1














        As you suspect, "outwest" is not a real word.




        "out West", two words, means "in the western part of the United States". NTC's AID




        e.g. "I lived out West for ten years."



        In the US you will also hear:



        • back East (refers mainly to the American Northeast, the New England states)

        • up North

        • down South

        Even those who have never been to the American Northeast, North, or South, may occasionally use these phrases. e.g. "My son went to college back East."






        share|improve this answer



























          1












          1








          1







          As you suspect, "outwest" is not a real word.




          "out West", two words, means "in the western part of the United States". NTC's AID




          e.g. "I lived out West for ten years."



          In the US you will also hear:



          • back East (refers mainly to the American Northeast, the New England states)

          • up North

          • down South

          Even those who have never been to the American Northeast, North, or South, may occasionally use these phrases. e.g. "My son went to college back East."






          share|improve this answer















          As you suspect, "outwest" is not a real word.




          "out West", two words, means "in the western part of the United States". NTC's AID




          e.g. "I lived out West for ten years."



          In the US you will also hear:



          • back East (refers mainly to the American Northeast, the New England states)

          • up North

          • down South

          Even those who have never been to the American Northeast, North, or South, may occasionally use these phrases. e.g. "My son went to college back East."







          share|improve this answer














          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer








          edited 4 hours ago

























          answered 5 hours ago









          CentaurusCentaurus

          38.8k31125247




          38.8k31125247























              1














              "Outwest" is not a common term, but I have read it a few times. Obviously, it may sometimes represent simply a combination of "out" and "west" in "normal" (if perhaps erroneous) construction. Eg, "The Rockies are outwest."



              But it is sometimes used as a noun, where "the outwest" (likely to be capitalized as either "Outwest" or "OutWest") means roughly the same as "the west" (in the sense of the western US).



              And the term is also used as sort of adjective, with a flavor similar to "western", as noted in the original question. I suspect the intent is to avoid the "Cowboys and Indians" connotation of "western", and to make it seem more "edgy".



              Unfortunately, searching for this term is a challenge, as there is (or was) a literary magazine, several businesses, and even at least one town named "Outwest".






              share|improve this answer



























                1














                "Outwest" is not a common term, but I have read it a few times. Obviously, it may sometimes represent simply a combination of "out" and "west" in "normal" (if perhaps erroneous) construction. Eg, "The Rockies are outwest."



                But it is sometimes used as a noun, where "the outwest" (likely to be capitalized as either "Outwest" or "OutWest") means roughly the same as "the west" (in the sense of the western US).



                And the term is also used as sort of adjective, with a flavor similar to "western", as noted in the original question. I suspect the intent is to avoid the "Cowboys and Indians" connotation of "western", and to make it seem more "edgy".



                Unfortunately, searching for this term is a challenge, as there is (or was) a literary magazine, several businesses, and even at least one town named "Outwest".






                share|improve this answer

























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  "Outwest" is not a common term, but I have read it a few times. Obviously, it may sometimes represent simply a combination of "out" and "west" in "normal" (if perhaps erroneous) construction. Eg, "The Rockies are outwest."



                  But it is sometimes used as a noun, where "the outwest" (likely to be capitalized as either "Outwest" or "OutWest") means roughly the same as "the west" (in the sense of the western US).



                  And the term is also used as sort of adjective, with a flavor similar to "western", as noted in the original question. I suspect the intent is to avoid the "Cowboys and Indians" connotation of "western", and to make it seem more "edgy".



                  Unfortunately, searching for this term is a challenge, as there is (or was) a literary magazine, several businesses, and even at least one town named "Outwest".






                  share|improve this answer













                  "Outwest" is not a common term, but I have read it a few times. Obviously, it may sometimes represent simply a combination of "out" and "west" in "normal" (if perhaps erroneous) construction. Eg, "The Rockies are outwest."



                  But it is sometimes used as a noun, where "the outwest" (likely to be capitalized as either "Outwest" or "OutWest") means roughly the same as "the west" (in the sense of the western US).



                  And the term is also used as sort of adjective, with a flavor similar to "western", as noted in the original question. I suspect the intent is to avoid the "Cowboys and Indians" connotation of "western", and to make it seem more "edgy".



                  Unfortunately, searching for this term is a challenge, as there is (or was) a literary magazine, several businesses, and even at least one town named "Outwest".







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










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