Outlive \Out*live"\, v. t. [imp. & p. p. {Outlived}; p. pr. & vb. n. {Outliving}.] To live beyond, or longer than; to survive.
They live too long who happiness outlive. --Dryden.
The decision by a three-judge panel of the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta means that Judi Buenoano, 47, will outlive her death warrant, which expires at noon Monday.
Women still outlive and outnumber men in America, but improving life expectancy rates for males allowed their total number to increase faster than women during the 1980s for the first time since early in this century, the Census Bureau said Tuesday.
Women, on average, outlive men by 6.9 years.
That finding is consistent with the fact that women in general tend to outlive men, he said.
Authors and their subjects have squabbled for years; Oscar Wilde's advice to the famous was to outlive their biographers.
It is an example of the way solutions tend to outlive problems they were devised to overcome, thereby becoming problems themselves. D J Paul, 5 Aldermary Road, Bromley, Kent BR1 3PH Many are called but few are chosen.
Even now, it is far from clear who will succeed Mr. Deng as China's leader or whether his policies of economic liberalization, so important to the future of free-wheeling Hong Kong, can outlive him.
Traditionally in Mexico, a lame-duck president struggles to ensure that his programs outlive him while the president-elect, eager to preserve his independence, savages much of his predecessor's legacy.
They never thought their child would outlive them," said Stokesbury, a state social service worker and administrator for 18 years. "The doctors said their children wouldn't live past their teens.