outsendingEtymologyFrom outsend, equivalent to out- + sending or outsend + -ing. Cognate with Dutch uitsending (“broadcast, emission, transmission”), German Aussendung (“a sending out”), Swedish utsändning (“broadcast”).nounA message abroad; something that is sent out.“[…] with that comparison which I think sometimes is the mightiest in our language — that comparison of this successive outsending and inbringing of the worlds by the Creator at the centre of things to the beating of the heart of God.”A transmission; broadcast.“Active stereoradio function simultaneously with looking at a local videoprogram and a simultaneous outsending of a private videoprogram […]”