outsoar means to soar beyond or above. Lexicurio rates it Sui generis — a strength score of 87 out of 100.
outsoar is pronounced /aʊtˈsɔː(ɹ)/.
Why “outsoar” is a great word
OUTSOAR — [Verb] To soar beyond or above something in flight or lofty ascent. From the English prefix out- (meaning 'beyond' or 'outside') + the verb soar (meaning 'to fly or rise high in the air'). First recorded in 1665–75. Unlike "surpass" (which denotes exceeding in any general quality) or "oversoar" (which implies a direct physical crossing above), to outsoar is to exceed in the very capacity for aerial transcendence. It is the lark ascending past the fixed orbit of the hawk, the rocket leaving the atmosphere's last blue tinge behind, and the human spirit reaching for a consolation just beyond the grasp of its earthly form—a brief, defiant victory over the altitude of circumstance.
Etymology
From out- + soar.
verb
- To soar beyond or above.“[T]here's plenty hint / Your pinions have received of late a shock— / Out-soar them, cobswan of the silver flock!”