0 past simple and past participle of outscore
1 to score more points than another player or team in a competition:
It is not difficult to see why the modified output group outscored the other two groups.
In other words, both interaction groups outscored the noninteraction group.
In first quarter play, the team outscored their opponents 75-15 as the defense did not allow a touchdown.
For twelfth-graders, females outscored males by 18 points as opposed to 21 points in 2002.
The hosts did not lose a game, outscored their opponents by forty-six, but it was not enough to win.
During this stretch, the team was outscored 30122.
The team compiled a 30 record and outscored its opponents by a combined score of 82 to 2.
The team compiled a 20 record and outscored its opponents by a combined score of 36 to 10.