Money paid out; an amount spent.
Be or do something to a greater degree.
1There is an increased outgo at every turn which he cannot avoid.
2I give below the income and the outgo for the last four years:-
3There was nobody in the country who could outgo him on a hunt.
4The garden was still more of an outgo than the greenhouse.
5Are they to cause great outgo in my kitchen and cellar?
6Don't waste your sympathies on him, either; he'll never repay you the outgo.
7It was not the outgo that counted, but the receipts.
8The greenhouse business was an outgo from first to last.
9This represents an approximation between income and outgo which it would be hard to improve.
10Of him who speaks, which does all griefs outgo.
11His autograph quest cost him stationery, postage, car-fare-alloutgo.
12By working together, the Congress and the Executive can keep a balance between income and outgo.
13Almost from the day this inflow ceased money seemed scarce everywhere, for the outgo still continued.
14The instinct of giving is the pressure of the surplus; the natural outgo of humanity, its fruit.
15Mr. By-ends and his company also staggered and kept behind, that Christian and Hopeful might outgo them.
16There's the income to meet the outgo.