0 past simple and past participle of outclass
1 to be much better than someone or something:
The company's latest mountain bikes outclass all the competition.
We might then be outclassed in the cold war.
As a consequence we are entirely outclassed and our year's profit may have turned into a loss.
Any country that neglects this will find itself outclassed and outperformed on and behind the battlefield, whatever mass of individual equipment it can muster.
That is partly because farmers are continuing to grow outclassed varieties of cereals.
We were outclassed in scientific effort, money, materials of all kinds including fissile, and our economic system was showing signs of distress.
I have always found that where there has been individual class hatred it has been in the case of a man who has been outclassed.
This threat seems to have outclassed anything we have seen since the war.
There, we would appear to be locally outclassed by a factor of 2:1.