What's the difference between outlast and outwear?

Outlast


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To exceed in duration; to survive; to endure longer than.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The reduction in 5-HIAA was transient after potassium infusion, but outlasted the infusion of veratridine or aconitine by several hours.
  • (2) The EEG effects of the low dose were smaller than those of the middle and high doses, whose peak effects did not statistically differ; but the high dose produced more persistent effects, which outlasted the infusion period for a longer time.
  • (3) However, after in vivo administration, NA uptake was inhibited only in synaptosomes from imipramine-treated rats, suggesting that imipramine, or its metabolite desipramine, binds to the NA carrier in a manner outlasting the preparation of synaptosomes, whereas mianserin is washed away.
  • (4) However, it appeared that the duration of these responses was rather short; in 23 of 36 radiation treatments with a follow-up of more than 4 months, progression of the tumour was seen within that time, while the palliative effect outlasted the survival of the patients in only four cases.
  • (5) Also, whereas the duration of EP effect did not exceed 5 min for Iso and For, it was markedly sustained for VIP, outlasting its contractile but paralleling its vasodilatory effect.
  • (6) The peak effect of THC on the central nervous system coincided well with the reduction of intraocular pressure induced by the drug; hypotony, however, outlasted euphoria.
  • (7) These outlasted clinical remission for many years, sometimes up to the age of 16.
  • (8) Neurokinins caused a slow, prolonged excitation which outlasted the period of application.
  • (9) The obtained data suggest that exposure to CVP may lead to functional changes in the brain outlasting the period of ChE depression.
  • (10) This was done because optokinetic nystagmus typically outlasts cessation of an optokinetic stimulus.
  • (11) In the case of granule cells, depression of IPSPs by (-)baclofen outlasted an only small membrane hyperpolarization, conductance increase or outward current.
  • (12) With Johnson due to step down in January, Duncan may end up outlasting his chairman after all.
  • (13) The prolonged onset period and persistent analgesic effects outlasting the period of stimulation--features that have been reported in other studies of brain stimulation-produced pain suppression--were observed in the present study.
  • (14) How or if Mayweather outlasts that exponential increase in pressure may either blur or enhance his reputation.
  • (15) Inhibition did not appear to outlast the midbrain stimulation period.
  • (16) The trains also triggered a prolonged potential, negative at the dendritic pole of our electrodes, which far outlasted the pulse-evoked response.
  • (17) Last summer, I spent several days in the British Library reading austerity cookbooks: survival manuals for housewives who had to cope with the rationing that would outlast the war by several years (butter, cheese, margarine, cooking fats and meat did not come off the ration until 1954).
  • (18) Unlike the brief (approximately equal to 1 ms) openings in mode 1, mode 2 openings tend to be longer (greater than 10 ms) and often outlast the test pulse.
  • (19) For example, kindling-induced potentiation can far outlast LTP.
  • (20) The dermal electrodes were best tolerated and outlasted the corneal in repeated use.

Outwear


Definition:

  • (v. t.) To wear out; to consume or destroy by wearing.
  • (v. t.) To last longer than; to outlast; as, this cloth will outwear the other.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Other directions of this ligamentous graft lead either to a tenodesis or to an outwear of the graft without a stabilizing effect.

Words possibly related to "outlast"

Words possibly related to "outwear"