Outlandish describes things that are strikingly strange or unusual; in this use, it's a synonym of
“The Derby is the horse racing equivalent of opening day, a spring festival for which all the sport's top owners and trainers put their best feet forward, thinking this might be their year. More even than the outlandish hats worn by patrons, optimism defines it.” — Childs Walker, The Baltimore Sun, 7 May 2023
For some, the grass isn’t necessarily greener on the other side of the fence—it may also be very, very strange. The side-eye that skeptical sorts cast toward visitors from parts yonder is embedded in the history of the ancient word outlandish. In Old English someone described as “outlandish” came from an outland, i.e., a foreign land. Within a few hundred years, outlandish had broadened in use to describe anything unfamiliar or strange. It’s now commonly applied to things—especially things people do, wear, or say—that are strikingly out of the ordinary, or even just too-too—that is, too far beyond reasonable or proper limits or standards. But lest you mistake us for equating outlandish with wrong or bad, heed the words of Tony Stark (as played by Robert Downey Jr. in Iron Man) when addressing speculation that he is secretly a superhero: “That would be outlandish… and fantastic.”
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