outpost

English

Etymology

From out- +‎ post.

Pronunciation

  • (US) IPA(key): /ˈaʊtˌpoʊst/
  • Audio (US):(file)
  • Rhymes: -əʊst

Noun

outpost (plural outposts)

  1. A military post stationed at a distance from the main body of troops.
    The outpost did not have enough ammunition to resist a determined assault.
  2. The body of troops manning such a post.
    Sgt. Smith fleeced most of the rest of the outpost of their earnings in their weekly game of craps.
  3. An outlying settlement.
    Beyond the border proper, there are three small outposts not officially under government protection.
    • 1953 October, H. C. Casserley, “Closure of the Londonderry & Lough Swilly Railway”, in Railway Magazine, page 701:
      On March 9, 1903, an extension, 50 miles in length, was opened from Letterkenny to the remote outpost of Burtonport, a small township on the shores of the Atlantic in the far north-west corner of Co. Donegal, running through some of the wildest and bleakest parts of the country.
    • 2009, Julius Mutwol, Peace Agreements and Civil Wars in Africa, →ISBN, page 190:
      [] Colonel Moen was trying to make sense of the radio nets, which had never really been operational let alone secure; our numerous outposts were cobbled together with hand-held Motorolas and too few repeater stations []
    • 2025 April 21, Peter Stanford, “Pope Francis obituary”, in The Guardian[1]:
      Francis, by contrast, was at pains to listen and act, going so far in 2023 as to call a curiously named synod on synodality in his anxiety to make the process work better as a conduit between the centre and the outposts of his global church.
  4. (chess) A square protected by a pawn that is in or near the enemy's stronghold.

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