[ adj ] that is going out or leaving <adj.all> the departing trainan outward journey outward-bound ships
Outbound \Out"bound`\, a. Outward bound. --Dryden.
Other states with a high share of outbound households were Iowa, Wyoming, Louisiana and West Virginia.
MCI said it will expand its Corporate Account Service to include outbound long-distance services and will introduce a new volume discount pricing option.
The expert was called after prosecutors indicated they wanted jurors to hear Hazelwood's voice on a tape made on the Exxon Valdez's trip into Valdez, before the tanker went aground March 24 on the outbound trip.
JAL, the largest carrier operating out of Japan, saw its outbound passenger performance grow by 13% in 1987.
Initially, the system would allow only one-way, outbound calling in Washington and its Maryland and Virginia suburbs, much like pay phones.
INS Boston district director Charles Cobb welcomed Dukakis' interest in deporting illegal aliens and said the U.S. government can pay their outbound plane fare. "We have money to move people," Cobb said.
"U.S. Customs had some information that there might possibly be an outbound currency violation connected with the flight," spokesman Michael Sheehan said.
"It achieved earth-escape velocity and is now heading outbound toward the sun," said Brian Welch, spokesman for Johnson Space Center in Houston.
Exports to the British colony jumped 11.2 per cent to account for 22.9 per cent of outbound shipments.
Hazelwood radioed the Coast Guard for permission to proceed outbound from Valdez in the in-bound lane because no other ship was incoming to Valdez at that time.
Expanding fleet to grab wave of Japanese outbound trafic.
Most had boarded outbound trains.
Moreover, Mr. Parsons says fliers can still beat the system by buying outbound and return tickets separately.