outblossomEtymologyFrom out- + blossom.nounThe best that is produced (by something); culmination.“Florence herself is the outblossom of modern Italian civilization.”verbTo blossom more beautifully than, or with more flowers than.“Fifty a contemptible Age! Not at all, a very faſhionable Age I think—I aſſure you, I know very conſiderable Beaus, that ſet a good Face upon Fifty,. Fifty! I have ſeen Fifty in a ſide Box by Candle-light, out-bloſſom Five and Twenty.”To bloom in spite of.“I hear in her poems something that will outblossom hell itself and help us all to turn it back into earth again.”To blossom forth; to emerge into a state of blossoming; to flower.“Be strong! the wind to the shorn lamb is tempered; The way, though weary, teacheth to repose ; Life, though with bitter memories hampered, Will yet outblossom as the summer rose."”