Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English
The Collaborative International Dictionary
out-of-town \out-of-town\ adj. happening in or being of another town or city; as, an out-of-town tryout.
Wiktionary
a. (alternative form of out of town English)
WordNet
adj. happening in or being of another town or city; "an out-of-town tryout"; "an out-of-town school"
Usage examples of "out-of-town".
While Brockport has never been besieged by anything remotely resembling a crime epidemic, like so many other college towns, the only recurrent problem seems to be weekend bar brawls between drunken students and local rowdies, who are derogatorily referred to as townies by the mostly out-of-town student body.
Typically, Celia tested the 53 arrangement, by going on an out-of-town trip with Andrew and leaving the older woman in charge.
With his doodlebug he followed Denmark into Blacktown, the section of Camelot devoted to housing skilled slaves whose services were being rented out, or where trusted slaves who were running errands for out-of-town landlords found room and board.
It was crowded, with most of the out-of-town visitors clustered around Buttonholes, buying him drinks while they listened to his description of his premonitions.
Since the Apalachin fiasco of 1957, more and more out-of-town elements of the Outfit had been using the hotel as a safe meeting place.
As he drank his third cup of coffee in his bachelor apartment over the garage, he glanced at the floor, which was strewn with out-of-town newspapers.
How can we cash out-of-town checks when we don't know whether a town's still there?
Being so sociable, and, it's true, socially competitive, we residents draw lots to see who'll entertain for our out-of-town visitors at our reunions, and some of us arranged to meet at Tug Hill Park at four p.
Joe Newall was not popular in Castle Rock, partly because he made his money out of town, partly because Budreau, his predecessor, had been such an all-around nice fellow (though a fool, they always reminded each other, as if foolishness and niceness went together and it would be death to forget it), but mostly because his damned house was built with out-of-town labor.
Pete Manners had had it lying around ever since hed received it as a gift four years ago from an out-of-town relative who hadnt known hed stopped smoking.
Qwilleran's eyes, known for their doleful expression and drooping lids, roamed over the clutter on the editor's desk, the crumpled paper that had missed the wastebasket, the half-open file drawers, the stacks of out-of-town newspapers.
Those kids who weren't home-schooled were bused to out-of-town schools.
On the letterheads of half a dozen large out-of-town manufacturers in various lines were brief but eulogistic comments upon the work done in their plants by Mr.
Two out-of-town college kids, liquored up and 'luded out, lost it on the Stock Island Bridge.
Now why should we use this windfall so's our students get to stare at buck-naked ladies when we could be buying a real nice van to transport the basketball team to out-of-town games?