outeducate

English

Etymology

From out- +‎ educate.

Verb

outeducate (third-person singular simple present outeducates, present participle outeducating, simple past and past participle outeducated)

  1. (transitive) To educate better than.
    • 2009 March, “Federal stimulus package includes $981 million in education funds for Ohio”, in Ohio Schools[1]:
      “Because we know America can’t outcompete the world tomorrow if our children are being outeducated today, we are making the largest investment in education in our nation’s history,” President Obama said.
    • 2011 January 29, “The President's Weekly Address”, in GovInfo[2]:
      That’s what companies like Orion are doing, and that’s how America will win the future: by outinnovating, outeducating, and outbuilding our competitors.
    • 2011 March 30, “CONGRESSIONAL RECORD — SENATE”, in Congressional Record[3]:
      We are talking about how America, as the President said, can outeducate, outinnovate and outbuild our competitors. We have to outinnovate.
    • 2023 June 9, “Remarks on Career-Connected Learning and Workforce Training Programs in Rocky Mount, North Carolina”, in Govinfo[4]:
      And then she goes on to say—and I—she's right that "any country that outeducates us will outcompete us." Any country that outeducates us will outcompete us.