subs. (common).—An outside passenger. Fr. un voyageur à quinze francs le cent. See INSIDE.

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  1798.  CANNING, Poetry of the Anti-Jacobin, 163 [1890].

          So down thy hill, romantic Ashbourn, glides
The Derby dilly carrying Three Insides.

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  1816.  SCOTT, Old Mortality, ii. A wheel carriage bearing eight insides and six OUTSIDES.

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  1836.  DICKENS, Pickwick Papers, xxxvi. The OUTSIDES did as OUTSIDES always do. They were very cheerful and talkative at the beginning of every stage, and very dismal and sleepy in the midddle, and very bright and wakeful again, towards the end.

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  Adj. (old colloquial).—1.  The utmost.—B. E. (c. 1696).

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  OUTSIDE ’LIZA, intj. (common).—‘Get out of this.’

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  TO GET OUTSIDE OF, verb. phr. (common).—1.  To eat or drink; as, to get outside of a pint of beer, or a chop; (2) to understand; and (3) see quot.

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  1888.  BOLDREWOOD, Robbery under Arms, xiv. He looked better OUTSIDE of a horse than on his own legs.

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  2.  (venery).—To copulate: of women only: see GREENS and RIDE.

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