outstrip means to move more quickly than (someone or something) so as to outrun or leave it behind. Lexicurio rates it Distinctive — a strength score of 68 out of 100.
outstrip is pronounced /ˌaʊtˈstɹɪp/.
Etymology
From out- (prefix forming verbs with the sense of exceeding or surpassing) + strip (“(obsolete) to move or pass by quickly”).
verb
- To move more quickly than (someone or something) so as to outrun or leave it behind.“We quickly outstripped the amateur runners.”
- To exceed or surpass (someone or something).“This year’s production has already outstripped last year’s.”
- To exceed or overstep (a boundary or limit); to transgress.“Therefore Gentlemen, / And kinde Spectators, if I haue out-ſtript / An old mans gratuitie, or ſtrict canon, thinke / What a yong Wife, and a good Brayne may doe: / Stretch Ages truth ſometimes, and crack it too.”