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7 Sentences With "outrivaled"

How to use outrivaled in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "outrivaled" and check conjugation/comparative form for "outrivaled". Mastering all the usages of "outrivaled" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Already the largest investor in Myanmar's energy sector, operating pipelines that transport oil and gas from a delivery point on Myanmar's western coast to China's southwest, CNPC has outrivaled its global peers for a foothold in the market.
By 1895, association football had outrivaled the Swedish variant, with much help by the English, Scottish and Australian immigrant workers that introduced the modern code at their workplaces.Jönsson, p. 211.
Azinović started his professional career at his home town club Kalmar FF in 2005. He was the second choice behind Petter Wastå and made three appearances for the club in Allsvenskan. In 2010 both Azinović and Wastå were outrivaled by Etrit Berisha.
The "Phadebas Amylase Test" (PAT) was the first product developed by Pharmacia Diagnostics and was launched in 1970. The name Phadebas is an abbreviation of Pharmacia Diagnostics Biologically Active Substances. In the 70s, PAT was used in hospitals worldwide as an in vitro diagnostics test for acute pancreatitis but the application was later outrivaled by automatic analysis systems. PAT is no longer marketed for the IVD-market and no longer upholds its EC- certificate.
According to an 1896 publication, Annals of Music in Philadelphia and History of the Musical Fund Society, another singer, Mrs. Burke, had been the most famous American singer until she was outrivaled by Mrs. French. Mrs. French had studied music with Benjamin Carr, an early American composer, music publisher, and music teacher from Philadelphia. She also studied with a Henri- Noel Gilles (1778–1834), a French-born and musically educated guitarist, oboist, and composer of Philadelphia.
Robert Clive, 1st Baron Clive The English sought to stake out claims in India at the expense of the Portuguese dating back to the Elizabethan era. In 1600, Queen Elizabeth I incorporated the English East India Company (later the British East India Company), granting it a monopoly of trade from the Cape of Good Hope eastward to the Strait of Magellan. In 1639, it acquired Madras on the east coast of India, where it quickly surpassed Portuguese Goa as the principal European trading centre on the Indian Subcontinent. Through bribes, diplomacy, and manipulation of weak native rulers, the company prospered in India, where it became the most powerful political force, and outrivaled its Portuguese and French competitors.
A journal, at the end of the nineteenth century published the following: "Man has been defined, perhaps somewhat crudely, says Food and Cookery, as an animal that prefers a properly cooked meal to raw food, and Noah's wine to Adam's ale." Madeleine L'Engle used the term in her 1986 novel, Many Waters, and David Garnett used the phrase in his 1963 novel, Two by Two: A Story of Survival. Elizabeth Barrett Browning's 1856 epic poem, Aurora Leigh has the following lines: "For everywhere/ We're too materialistic,—eating clay,/ (Like men of the west) instead of Adam's corn/ And Noah's wine." A work criticizing drunkenness from 1899 states: > Noah survived one flood, only to be the source of another; a flood that for > its disastrous results and heartrending consequences has outrivaled the > flood of his preserver, for the sparkling, crimson fluid from Noah's wine > press has ... [been the cause] of misery [for] millions of helpless, > struggling, pitiful human objects, carrying them on and on to an ocean of > woe—to a deep, dark sea of oblivion.

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