outlandish• None of it seems too outlandish.• He arrived looking suitably outlandish, a traveler from a far place, some one to be cautiously investigated.• Parts of Lisa's story sounded outlandish, and no one would believe her.• She came to the party wearing an outlandishcostume and blondwig.• outlandish costumes• There is nothing outlandish in the idea of lions killinghunters.• In other words, it might dissuadeworthylawsuits even as it fails to protect against outlandish ones.• There is no right of rebuttal, no editorialfilter, no mechanism to keep outlandish or unsupported opinions off the air.• A crash is a moment of panic when events are out of control and outlandishpredictions become thinkable.• But that was the sort of outlandishrevelation Louis seemed to want.• Before going amongst outlandishstrangers, it may be sensible to camouflage oneself.
Originoutlandish
Old Englishutlendisc, from utland“foreign country”