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outface

From Wiktionary, the free dictionary

English

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Etymology

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From out- +‎ face.

Verb

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outface (third-person singular simple present outfaces, present participle outfacing, simple past and past participle outfaced)

  1. (transitive) To disconcert someone with an unblinking face-to-face confrontation; to stare down; to withsay
  2. (transitive) To boldly confront a situation.
    • 1906, Violet Hunt, The Workaday Woman, page 1:
      Quiet people too, for I think that about this time a sort of remorseful tenderness comes over the bullies and the nagsters, so that they go about gently and deprecatingly, hoping by one day's record sweetness to outface the year's blusterings.

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