The Collaborative International Dictionary
Outlandish \Out*land"ish\, a. [AS. [=u]tlendisc foreign. See Out, Land, and -ish.]
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Foreign; not native. [archaic]
Him did outlandish women cause to sin.
--Neh. xiii. 26.Its barley water and its outlandish wines.
--G. W. Cable. -
Hence: Deviating conspicuously from common practice; strange; freakish; bizarre; rude; barbarous; uncouth; clownish; as, an outlandish dress, behavior, or speech; -- usually used in a negative sense.
Something outlandish, unearthy, or at variance with ordinary fashion.
--Hawthorne. [1913 Webster]
-- Out*land"ish*ly, adv.
Wiktionary
adv. In an outlandish manner.
WordNet
adv. in an outlandish manner; "the Bavarian was outlandishly dressed in lederhosen"
Usage examples of "outlandishly".
I kissed Rita ever more outlandishly, framed in the open front door to give Doakes the best possible picture.
When I had passed to the entrance in the rikisha, this walk made so outlandishly a loud noise that I had felt coy.
The operation had turned a modest profit, too, funding a few of the more outlandishly secret projects Nasi had running.
Add in the pierced nose, the outlandishly long thick hair, the Orcish blood and the men's clothes and we're talking about a person who shouldn't be allowed to pollute a Human city.
With so many cheap shortcuts available from the Great Library, who needed such a tool kit of outlandishly extravagant tricks?