outfall
English
Etymology 1
From Middle English outfallen, equivalent to out- + fall. Compare Dutch uitvallen (“to fall out, sally”), German ausfallen (“to fall out, lunge”), Swedish utfalla (“to fall out”).
Verb
outfall (third-person singular simple present outfalls, present participle outfalling, simple past outfell, past participle outfallen)
- (transitive, obsolete) To burst forth, as upon an enemy; make a sally.
Etymology 2
From out- + fall. Compare Dutch uitval (“outburst, sally, eruption”), German Ausfall (“falling out, sally”), Swedish utfall (“sally, issue”).
Noun
outfall (plural outfalls)
- (obsolete) A sudden eruption of troops from a fortified place; sally.
- (dialectal) A quarrel; a falling out.
- The point or place of discharge of a river, drain, culvert, sewer, etc.; mouth; embouchure.
- 2014 October 18, Matt Weiser, “Could desalination solve California’s water problem?”, in The Sacramento Bee, retrieved 20150315:
- The rules focus primarily on two crucial operating features: seawater intakes and outfalls.
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Derived terms
- flapped outfall
- outfall sewer
- sea outfall
Anagrams
- fall out, fall-out, fallout