English language

How to pronounce outrider in English?

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Type Words
Type of bodyguard, escort

Examples of outrider

outrider
She just collapsed in front of the outrider, so there was really not any warning.
From the courier-journal.com
His outrider status may prove as influential on matters of tax and spend.
From the economist.com
An attendant on horseback called an outrider often rode ahead of or next to a carriage.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Is this the outrider of the deflationary forces sighted on the horizon?
From the guardian.co.uk
He rode up the front stretch slapping the hands of every outrider.
From the courier-journal.com
Tim Rathbone, one imagines, might have been an outrider in any talks with the Liberal Democrats.
From the independent.co.uk
Posing as a bold outrider, as he did at the summit, may yet help.
From the economist.com
The other outrider, who's been holding the horses in place, gets out of the way as fast he can.
From the chron.com
The poor outrider at the front, maybe 160 pounds, leans into the team, legs planted, back tensed.
From the chron.com
More examples
  • An escort who rides ahead (as a member of the vanguard)
  • Outrider is an album by Jimmy Page, released by Geffen Records on 19 June 1988. It is his first (and to date, only) genuine solo album, and the first time since 1969 he recorded with a record label other than Atlantic Records/Swan Song Records. It was recorded at The Sol, Page's personal studio. ...
  • The following is a list of fictional starships, cruisers, battleships, and other spacecraft in the Star Wars saga.
  • Outriders was an Australian children's television series that first screened on the Nine Network in 2001. It was a 26 part series produced by Southern Star Entertainment.
  • A guide or escort, especially one who rides in advance
  • An official on a lead pony who leads the Thoroughbreds onto the track and to the gate; the outrider enforces the rules regarding conduct on the track.
  • Rider who accompanies the horses to the gate and catches loose horses.
  • A messenger on horseback; part of the army's intelligence service.
  • Mounted attendant riding before or behind a carriage