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  1. Dictionary
    outright

    adverb

    adjective

    More definitions, origin and scrabble points

  2. completely or immediately: I think cigarette advertising should be banned outright. The driver and all three passengers were killed outright. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Complete and whole. (all) in one piece idiom. aggregate. all or nothing idiom. all told idiom. all-in-one. all-inclusive. fell. fibre. full strength. full-fledged.

  3. 1. : in entirety : completely. rejected the proposal outright. outright refuses to cooperate with law enforcement Tim Murphy. 2. : on the spot : instantaneously. was killed outright. 3. : without lien (see lien sense 1) or encumbrance (see encumbrance sense 2) purchased the property outright for cash. 4. : without restraint or reservation.

  4. completely; entirely. Synonyms: thoroughly, altogether, utterly, downright. without restraint, reserve, or concealment; openly: Tell me outright what's bothering you. at once; instantly: to be killed outright. without further payments due, restrictions, or qualifications: to own the house outright. Archaic. straight out or ahead; directly onward.

  5. completely or immediately: I think cigarette advertising should be banned outright. The driver and all three passengers were killed outright. SMART Vocabulary: related words and phrases. Complete and whole. (all) in one piece idiom. aggregate. all or nothing idiom. all told idiom. all-in-one. all-inclusive. fell. full strength. full-blown.

  6. 1. Without reservation or qualification; openly: finally responded outright to the question. 2. Completely and entirely; wholly: denied the charges outright. 3. At once; straightway: were killed outright in the crash. 4. Without additional payments owing, constraints, or stipulations: owns the property outright. adj. (out′rīt′) 1.

  7. You use outright to describe behaviour and actions that are open and direct, rather than indirect. Kawaguchi finally resorted to an outright lie. ...outright condemnation.

  8. adjective. /ˈaʊtraɪt/ [only before noun] complete and total. an outright ban/rejection/victory. She was the outright winner. No one party is expected to gain an outright majority. Want to learn more?

  9. Outright means direct and immediate — whether it's an adverb or an adjective: "The child's outright refusal to put on his shoes exasperated his babysitter." It can also mean “right away.” If you step on a slug, you’ll probably kill it outright.

  10. total, clear, and certain: an outright ban on smoking. an outright lie. an outright victory. outright. adverb uk / ˌaʊtˈraɪt / us. She needs 51% of the vote to win outright. He was killed outright (= immediately) when the car hit him.

  11. Definitions of 'outright' 1. You use outright to describe behavior and actions that are open and direct, rather than indirect. [...] 2. Outright means complete and total. [...] See to be killed outright [...] More. Synonyms of 'outright' • absolute, complete, total [...] • definite, clear, certain [...] • openly, frankly, plainly [...] More.