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outperform
[ out-per-fawrm ]
verb (used with object)
- to surpass in excellence of performance; do better than:
a new engine that outperforms the competition; a stock that outperformed all others.
outperform
/ ˌaʊtpəˈfɔːm /
verb
- to perform better than (someone or something)
Word History and Origins
Origin of outperform1
Example Sentences
Now researchers have developed a liquid cooling system integrated directly within a microchip that dramatically outperforms previous approaches.
In fact, the first independent evaluation of an AI diagnostic tool that outperformed humans in spotting cancer on mammograms was published only last month.
Developers have been claiming that medical AIs outperform or match human ability for some time, and the pandemic has sent this trend into overdrive as companies compete to get their tools noticed.
They trade on the belief they’ll outperform the rest of the market.
Another assessment by Ally Invest, an online brokerage, found that Apple generally outperformed the market one year after its stock splits, on average.
To be sure, while value has historically outperformed growth, the run of high-flying and expensive tech stocks have been what’s pushed the market higher in recent months and years.
That prospect raises the odds that value will outperform growth by an even bigger margin than in most recoveries.
Historically, the cheaper value becomes in relation to growth and hence the overall market, the more it outperforms going forward.
You should be able to know what your competitors are doing and how you can outperform them.
For a time in the 1930s, leading Western intellectuals believed fascist regimes could economically outperform democracies.
“Black students in New Orleans have started to outperform their peers in the rest of the state,” she writes.
But the rich now outperform the middle class by as much as the middle class outperform the poor.
ALEC: Are there shows that outperform us earnings-wise in a 30-minute half hour?
Even very smart people who do this all day, every day, do not, on average, outperform the market.
Members of the House of Representatives own portfolios that year-in, year-out outperform the SP 500 by an average 9%.
To follow the Midwest Path, Obama will have to outperform Kerry among working-class Iowans and Ohioans.
By the end of the school year, poor Nevada children in full-day kindergarten outperform affluent children in half-day programs.
By the way, these athletes can outperform many of us and we should be proud of them.
With competitive zeal, Bush sets out to outperform Poppy by learning from his political shortcomings.
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