outedge
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Verb
[edit]outedge (third-person singular simple present outedges, present participle outedging, simple past and past participle outedged)
- (transitive, archaic) To edge out.
- 1834, Georges Cuvier (baron), Edward Griffith, Charles Hamilton Smith, The animal kingdom arranged in conformity with its organization
- The naked mollusca are those in which the mantle is simply membranous or fleshy: most frequently, however, it forms in its thickness one or several laminae, of a substance more or less hard, deposited in layers, and increasing in extent, as well as in thickness, because the recent layers always outedge the old ones.
- 1834, Georges Cuvier (baron), Edward Griffith, Charles Hamilton Smith, The animal kingdom arranged in conformity with its organization
Noun
[edit]outedge (plural outedges)
- (graph theory) An outgoing edge in a digraph, i.e. one that leaves a particular node.