verbπShareTo eject; to expel."The teacher had to outing the disruptive student from the classroom. "actionorganizationpoliticsChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo reveal (a person) as LGBT+ (gay, trans, etc)."The gossip spread quickly that the new teacher was outing herself as lesbian to her colleagues. "culturesocietycommunicationhumanChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo reveal (a person or organization) as having a certain secret, such as a being a secret agent or undercover detective."The newspaper outing the former teacher as a spy shocked the entire school community. "communicationmediaorganizationgovernmentpoliceChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo reveal (a secret)."A Brazilian company outed the new mobile phone design."communicationmediasocietyChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
verbπShareTo come or go out; to get out or away; to become public or apparent."The company's financial troubles were eventually outing, despite their best efforts to keep them secret. "actioneventsocietymediaChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareA pleasure trip or excursion."The family planned a fun outing to the zoo. "entertainmentholidayactionChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareAn appearance to perform in public, for example in a drama, film, on a musical album, as a sports contestant etc."The student's outing in the school play was a big success. "entertainmentstagecultureChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading
nounπShareThe practice of publicly revealing that a person is homosexual or transgender without that person's consent."The gossip spread quickly about the outing of the school's new teacher, and many students felt uncomfortable. "culturesocietypoliticsmediacommunicationhumanattitudemoralrightpersonsexChat with AIVocabulary GamePractice Reading