outpress
/aʊtˈprɛs/
verb
- To press or squeeze something more thoroughly or with greater force than something else.
- The new hydraulic press can outpress the old model by applying twice the pressure.
- The machine is designed to outpress any manual method for extracting oil from seeds.
- She used a heavy stone to outpress the juice from the last of the lemons.
- To overcome or defeat someone or something by applying pressure, influence, or force.
- The larger company tried to outpress its smaller rival in the market negotiations.
- The team's defense worked to outpress the opposing offense and force a turnover.
- In the debate, she managed to outpress her opponent with stronger arguments.
Antonyms