Wo be to you scrybes, and pharises ypocrites, for ye are lyke unto paynted tombes which appere beautyfull outwardes: but are within full off deed mens bones and of all fylthynes.
out·wards in AM and sometimes in BRIT, use outward1. If something moves or faces outwards, it moves or faces away from the place you are in or the place you are talking about. The top door opened outwards inwards
If you say that a person or a group of people, such as a government, looks outwards, you mean that they turn their attention to another group that they are interested in or would like greater involvement with. Other poor countries looked outward, strengthening their ties to the economic superpowers. towards the outside or away from the centre of something inwards