| 单词 | over- | 
| 释义 | over-prefix 1.   In spatial and temporal senses, and in uses directly related to these.  a.    (a)   With verbs, or with nouns forming verbs, in the sense ‘on high, above the top or surface of’. A selection of typical formations is illustrated; see also overbrood v., over-canopy v., overdrop v., overhang v., oversoar v., etc.; in the related sense ‘rising above, surmounting’, as overrise v., overtop v., overtower v.; and in other uses in which the sense of position is a condition or element of other notions, as over-eye v., overjoy v., overlook v., overweep v.The compound verb is equivalent sometimes to the simple verb combined with over adv., as in overlay v., to lay (something) over; or, more frequently, to the simple verb (usually intransitive) combined with over prep., as in overhang v., to hang over (something), overlie v., to lie over or above (something); but in many cases, as overarch v., it is difficult or impossible to distinguish these. ΚΠ 1814    S. T. Coleridge Let. to J. Murray in  Lett. 		(1895)	 626  				Any more peccant thing of Froth, Noise, and Impermanence, that may have overbillowed it on the restless sea of curiosity. a1903    W. E. Henley Spring Winds that Blow in  Poems 		(1921)	 202  				Till, over-billowing all between Her cheerful margents, gray and living green, It floats and wanders.   over-branch  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1850    E. B. Browning Island xv  				With trees that overbranch The sea. 1946    C. Fry Firstborn 90  				I have grown too tall And keep out the sun, I overbranch the light.   over-cap  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > high position > position upon > be upon (something)			[verb (transitive)]		 overlieeOE ridec1460 to consist on?c1550 overlay1793 over-cap1839 1839    Fraser's Mag. 20 44  				The moon, rising with unclouded refulgence, overcapped the crest of eternal forests. 1909    Amer. Naturalist 43 439  				A green and white seedling or branch may become either green or white by the growing point becoming overcapped by the one or the other kind of tissue. 1967–8    Pacific Affairs 40 301  				This organization, which eventually replaced or over-capped most other student groups, was founded by the efforts of a small group.   over-cluster  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1854    Littell's Living Age 18 Nov. 329/2  				Beholding with wonder New stars over-clustering the sky. 1871    B. Taylor tr.  J. W. von Goethe Faust I. iii. 71  				Lo! in a shower Grapes that o'ercluster Gush into must. 1977    D. L. Jensen Role of Cluster Anal. Computer assisted Mass Appraisal 37  				Since it is necessary to over-cluster the data into a prespecified number of groups, the reallocative clustering techniques are preferred. 2015    B. Abu-Jamous et al.  Integrative Cluster Anal. in Bioinformatics xxiii. 367  				SSMCL employs the OPTOC paradigm to over-cluster the dataset to a large number of partitions.   over-crown  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1813    E. H. Thurlow Poems Several Occasions 120  				Phoebus, that with golden ray..doth over-crown the day. 1894    S. R. Crockett Lilac Sunbonnet 13  				The dry, twisted timothy grasses are beginning to overcrown the purple bells of the heather. 1935    in  P. G. Brewster Ballads & Songs Indiana 202  				Little did he think of the sorrow that overcrowned his head.   over-dome  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1869    R. Browning Ring & Bk. IV.  xi. 169  				Like bubble that o'er-domes a fly. 1891    G. MacDonald Rough Shaking i. 31  				I thought how like that veil was to our little life here, overdomed by that boundless foreshortening of space. a1914    J. Muir in  Wilderness World J. Muir 		(1954)	 313  				A bear's days are warmed by the same sun, his dwellings are overdomed by the same blue sky. 2008    R. Beard Becoming Drusilla i. 16  				I stole the girl's self-inflicted injuries for a novel (‘the backs of her hands were large brown blister-bubbles, over-doming the bones..’).   over-droop  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1567    A. Golding tr.  Ovid Metamorphosis 		(new ed.)	  xiii. f. 170v  				A bush of heare Dooth ouerdroope my visage grim. 1881    H. James Portrait of Lady II. v. 62  				High-walled lanes, into which..blossoming orchards overdrooped and flung a perfume. a1905    W. Sharp Valley of Pale Blue Flowers in  Poems & Dramas 		(1910)	 214  				No, I will clasp it close to my heart, overdroop with my hair. 1936    E. Blunden in  London Mercury July 232  				Passages crooked and slanted, ceilings stooped, And yews with drowsy arras overdrooped The windows of that home. ΚΠ 1861    M. Arnold Southern Night in  Poems 23  				There, where Gibraltar's cannon'd steep O'erfrowns the wave. a1889    W. Allingham Autumnal Sunshine in  Laurence Bloomfield 		(1890)	 47  				'Twere hard If rampant ruffianism could overfrown All right and rule. ΚΠ 1897    Westm. Gaz. 17 Feb. 2/3  				The crimson and the jacinth tints That over-glint the floe.   over-helm  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   				 [see helm n.1]			 (now archaic)ΚΠ OE    Beowulf 1364  				Wudu wyrtum fæst wæter oferhelmað. 1895    W. Morris Beowulf xxi, in  Coll. Wks. 		(1910–11)	 X. 220  				The wood fast by the roots over-helmeth the water. 1975    P. P. Pasolini in  S. Bondavalli Fictions of Youth 		(2015)	 v. 159  				A young person who awakes (to culture) today cannot but see me as part of this sort of paternal authority that overhelms him. Well, I don't want to allow that.   over-hover  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1793    W. Taylor tr.  J. W. von Goethe Iphigenia in Tauris  v. 114  				Let mercy, like to the holy flame of sacrifice, o'erhover the rude combat of thy breast. 1805    W. Taylor in  Ann. Rev. 3 544  				Like the star which over-hovered the manger at Bethlehem. 1916    E. Blunden Pastorals 29  				A firedrake beckons, with a moving mist around it, And over-hovers pallidly a haggard, stunted gnome. 2004    B. Ames Eighty-sixed 154  				His hand overhovers the mouse pad. ΚΠ 1850    E. B. Browning Wine of Cyprus ii  				Cyclops' mouth might plunge aright in, While his one eye over-leered. 1851    Internat. Mag. Lit., Art, & Sci. 1 Mar. 475/1  				His shoulder overleered By swart Silenus, sly and cunning knave. ΚΠ a1618    J. Sylvester Mysterie of Mysteries in  tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Diuine Weekes & Wks. 		(1621)	 facing p. 1215  				Ouer All things, not ouer-plaç't. 1889    I. C. Russell in  8th Ann. Rep. U.S. Geol. Surv. 1886–7: Pt. 1 384  				This is indicated not only by the manner in which the cones overplace and intersect each other. ΚΠ 1885    R. L. Stevenson  & F. Stevenson Dynamiter iv  				A range of very tall buildings..overplumbed the villas and their little gardens like a sea-board cliff. 1888    R. L. Stevenson Black Arrow  iii. vi. 189  				A piece of ruinous cliff..almost overplumbed the deck. ΚΠ 1858    J. D. Burns Peasant & Poet in  Vision of Prophecy 91  				The glance of him who lives by Faith, Whose hopes have overspired the cloud of sense. 1892    R. L. Stevenson  & L. Osbourne Wrecker xi. 180  				Methought she looked smaller than ever, sundry great ships overspiring her from close without. 1900    F. Norris Blix iii  				Ships innumerable nuzzled at the endless line of docks, mast overspiring mast, and bowsprit overlapping bowsprit. 1916    R. Jeffers Californians 11  				High on this far-viewed hill, and over-spired By cypresses, and locked with tangled boughs Of live-oaks and the eucalypts. ΚΠ 1833    J. F. Cooper Headsman I. iii. 49  				Thou hast the history of the plunge into the canal, by over-stooping to see the Venetian beauty. 1844    E. B. Browning Crowned & Buried iii  				Altars overstooped By meek-eyed Christs. 1883    A. Domett Ranolf & Amohia 		(rev. ed.)	 II.  vii. 282  				Crowning a cliff that overstooped The sea.   over-surge  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1845    T. Hood She is far from Land in  Compl. Poet. Wks. 		(1906)	 54  				Waves oversurging her, Sirens a-dirgeing her; Sharks all expecting her. 2001    Opera News 		(Nexis)	 1 Sept. 103  				Jun Markl conducted passionately, letting the music surge, sometimes letting the brass oversurge. ΚΠ ?a1425						 (?a1350)						    T. Castleford Chron. 		(1940)	 20584 (MED)  				Durand þe flodde alle it resaiues, So þat passande na water ouerwaiues. 1810    W. Taylor in  Monthly Mag. 29 418  				Shall..No golden cloud of praise O'erwave his way? 1856    J. Ruskin Notes Princ. Pict. Royal Acad. No.2. 13  				This fragment of grey wall, overwaved by its few ears of corn.  (b)   In verbal compounds that appear only to occur as the past or present participle (cf. sense  1a(c)). ΚΠ a1657    G. Daniel Idyllia in  Poems 		(1878)	 IV. iii. 89  				The Lust of Tyrants (over~banded still By hooded Law) carnalls the world at Will. ΚΠ a1382    Bible 		(Wycliffite, E.V.)	 		(Bodl. 959)	 3 Kings vi. 18  				With cedre al þe hous with inne forth was cloþed, hauynge his turnuris & his iuncturis forgid & grauyngis ouer-beynge [a1425 L.V. apperynge aboue; L. eminentes]. ΚΠ a1845    T. Hood in  Compl. Poet. Wks. 		(1906)	 53  				Cables entangling her,..Blocks over-dangling her. ΚΠ 1631    R. Brathwait Whimzies vii. 56  				A broad-brim'd hat or'e-pentising his discontented looke. ΚΠ 1563    W. Baldwin et al.  Myrrour for Magistrates 		(new ed.)	 Dk. Somerset sig. Aa.viii  				Standynge on a ladder, ouershryned wyth the Tyborne, a meete trone for all suche..Trayters. ΚΠ 1868    R. Browning Ring & Bk.  xi, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 X. 149  				The bend O'erturreted by Certosa.  (c)    (i)   Forming verbal nouns in -ing (see also overhanging n.); participial adjectives in -ing (see also overhanging adj.). ΚΠ 1801    R. Southey Thalaba II.  xii. 309  				Above the depth four overawning wings..Bore up a little car. 1838    R. Southey Madoc in  Poet. Wks. V. 217  				Some pitch the tent-pole, and pin down the lines That stretch the o'er-awning canvass.   over-beetling adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > crag > 			[adjective]		 > overhanging hangingc1330 low-browed1645 over-jutting1770 over-beetling1821 1821    Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Oct. 268/2  				Milman's part of the cloud was rather overbeetling and stiff in figure, but a magnificent apparition notwithstanding. 1828    W. Sotheby Mont-Blanc in  Italy & Other Poems 217  				Where at the thunder's awful peal Th' o'erbeetling avalanche bursts, and rocks beneath it reel. 1934    C. A. Smith White Sybil  				The chill trickle of rills born of the eternal glaciers fell upon him from overbeetling ledges. 2004    C. A. Smith Red World of Polaris 71  				Gigantic engines that appeared to use and combine every possible geometric form in their overbeetling bulks of dark stone and burnished metal. ΚΠ 1847    H. Miller First Impressions Eng. viii. 138  				Seeing in every dark overbellying cloud A vengeful angel. ΚΠ 1820    Scots Mag. Apr. 330/2  				The progress of that heretic, from the obscurity and peace of his infant days, to that overboding extent of power which his name has at last obtained. 1895    H. R. Reynolds in  Expositor Nov. 336  				The strange and overboding sense of man's life after death.   over-curling adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1868    Brit. Jrnl. Dental Sci. 11 490  				The chief characteristics you should look for in a flask..are—1st, that it should be as nearly as possible a perfect sphere..; there should be no overcurling lip. 1876    H. Melville Clarel II.  iii. xxix. 424  				When from the rail where lashed they bide The sweep of overcurling tide. 1894    J. Muir Mountains Calif. xi  				All sweeping forward together with a high, overcurling front. 1912    J. Muir Yosemite iv  				Far the greater part is at length locked fast in bossy overcurling cornices along the ridges. 2015    R. Naranjo Art of Seamanship x. 309/1  				Finally, gravity transforms the steep, overcurling swell into a breaking wave. ΚΠ 1850    S. T. Dobell Roman  iv, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1875)	 I. 49  				Some lone Egerian grove, Where sacred and o'er-greeting branches shed Perpetual eve.   over-jutting adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > the earth > land > landscape > high land > crag > 			[adjective]		 > overhanging hangingc1330 low-browed1645 over-jutting1770 over-beetling1821 1770    J. Armstrong Now Summer is Gone in  Misc. I. 155  				Th' o'erjutting banks, As long unpractic'd to so steep a view, Seem to look dizzy on the moving pomp. 1806    J. Grahame Birds Scotl. in  Lit. Panorama Nov. 249  				The eagle, from her eyry on the crag Of over-jutting rock, beholds afar. 1895    N. Amer. Rev. Aug. 142  				She has often a long face, a receding forehead, over-jutting brows. 1907    P. MacKaye Sappho & Phaon 56  				The top of the curtain is designed as an overjutting tiled roof. a1963    F. Engleheart Select. of Poetry 		(1965)	 14  				My rock, an over-jutting plane, set ages past at just that angle.   overshelving adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1812    A. Plumptre tr.  H. Lichtenstein Trav. S. Afr. I. 132  				It presents the appearance of a high sunken overshelving wall. 1822    W. Herbert Weird Wanderer of Jutland  i. i. 14  				The nuptial train..near'd that huge o'er-shelving rock Fast by the stream. 1854    N. Amer. Rev. July 111  				The river is very beautiful, and the deep gorge in the rocks through which it passes..is wonderfully grand,..solemnly darkened by the overshelving rocks. 1882    Harper's Mag. Aug. 332/1  				In others they [sc. cliffs] are formed in far overshelving layers. 1908    Amer. Mag. Mar. 522/1  				Catching sight of a scant blue shadow that fell from an overshelving rock, he crept into its meager protection. ΚΠ 1859    C. Dickens Tale of Two Cities  i. vi. 32  				Under the over-swinging lamps. 1899    Overland Monthly Feb. 161/1  				A large peninsula of naked, overswinging rock soon became visible to the naked eye.  (ii)   Forming participial adjectives in -ed, as overclouded adj.  (iii)   Also with adjectives in -ed formed on nouns. ΚΠ 1773    J. Ross Fratricide 		(MS)	 vi. 38  				Round the grave, O'ervisto'd hight with intermingling sprays.  (d)   With nouns, in the sense ‘situated above’ or ‘higher’, or denoting the upper of two (or more) things; see also overbridge n., overbrow n., overcheek n., overpark n., overworld n.   Cf. over adj. 1a. ΚΠ 1513–14    in  J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham 		(1901)	 III. 663  				1 long Roppe for the kyln, 4s., et 1 overcorde, 2d. ΚΠ 1387–8    in  J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham 		(1899)	 II. 314 (MED)  				Le Overdeyhous. 1421–2    in  J. T. Fowler Extracts Acct. Rolls Abbey of Durham 		(1899)	 II. 303 (MED)  				Pro cariacione feni ad le Overdeyhous, 4 s. ΘΚΠ the world > space > relative position > high position > 			[noun]		 > upper part over-endeOE over-halfOE overpartya1387 overparta1398 overera1400 upperside1484 upside1611 OE    Antwerp Gloss. 		(1955)	 165  				Sinciput, oferhealf heafod. c1429    Mirour Mans Saluacioune 		(1986)	 l. 1476  				The folk with thaire bestaille drye-fote alle ouer it ȝode; For on the over half the Arche [L. in superiori parte arcae] the water no ferthere ranne. ΚΠ 1519    W. More Jrnl. 		(1914)	  i. 87  				Item for store yeles a M that wer put in [th]e over poole in [th]eparke of hallow 20 d. 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 Isa. xxxvi. A  				By the condite of the ouerpole.  (e)   In transferred senses of ‘higher, upper’, esp. in relation to pitch, as overblow v.1, oversound v., overtone n.  b.   With the sense ‘above in power, authority, rank, or station’, ‘superior’.  (a)   In verbs; see also over-govern v., overlead v., overlord v., overmaster v., overrule v., oversway v., etc. ΘΚΠ society > authority > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > be superior in authority rulea1398 predominate1589 over-command1598 over-order1850 1598    R. Barret Theorike & Pract. Mod. Warres 123  				Distant from all things that might ouer-command the same. a1600    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie 		(1648)	  viii. sig. Vv  				There is no higher nor greater that can in those causes over-command them.  (b)   In agent nouns (see also overruler n., overseer n.); also in other nouns (whether or not derived from or related to verbs), and adjectives (see also overking n., overlord n., over-rule n., overruling adj., oversway n.). ΚΠ 1535    Goodly Prymer in Eng. sig. S  				It is the songe of Dauid committed to the ouerchaunter. ΘΚΠ society > authority > 			[noun]		 > those in authority > person in authority > person(s) in high authority over-chief1853 higher-up1902 1853    J. Stevenson tr.  Bede Eccl. Hist. 505  				If they should come into the presence of their over-chief. 1903    Publ. Amer. Econ. Assoc. 4 2  				The right to exploit definite tracts was allowed to the chiefs by the king or over-chief. 1915    J. Roscoe Northern Bantu xxii. 231  				Once a sub-chief is established in office, he pays no taxes because there are no taxes levied in the country by any chief; still, a peasant acknowledges his over-chief by giving him presents of goats, sheep, and, sometimes, a cow. ΚΠ 1607    J. Day et al.  Trauailes Three Eng. Brothers sig. E1v  				Though my humillitie (I vow by heauen) Doth not affect that ouerdignitie.   over-god  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1844    R. W. Emerson in  Dial Apr. 516  				They must perish, and there is no over-god to stop or to mollify this hideous enginery that..takes them up into its terrific system. 1886    T. W. Heney Sursum Corda in  Fortunate Days 61  				Overgod, hear us; this is no god of ours. 1960    K. Rexroth in  G. R. S. Mead Fragm. Faith Forgotten 		(new ed.)	 p. x  				There is also a trinity of couples and behind them all an overgod, Baal Shamain, the Lord of Heaven.   over-shepherd  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1854    J. B. Finley Sketches Western Methodism 212  				Ready for every position which God..might assign him, he said to the over-shepherds of the Church, ‘Here I am; send me.’ 1927    Amer. Hist. Rev. 33 182  				In all his dealings he was first of all a priest, ‘the speaking image of a deeply religious over-shepherd’. 1996    R. F. Anderson Lectionary Preaching Workbk. 171  				This shepherd/king realized that he needed an over-shepherd.  c.   With the sense of inclination to one side so as to lean over the space beneath. In verbs, such as overbend v., overbias v., overlean v., overweigh v.   Also in derived and related adjectives and nouns, such as overleaning adj., overleaning n.The cross-reference to a supposed noun overbias at this sense in  N.E.D. (1904) may be an error, as no such headword was included, and no evidence for it has come to light.  d.   With the sense of passing across overhead, and so ‘away, off’. In verbs, such as overblow v.1, overcarry v., overdrive v., overpass v., etc. Also in nouns and adjectives.  e.    (a)    (i)   With the sense of surmounting, passing over the top, or over the brim or edge (also in extended use when used in relation to liquids, with the container as object). In verbs (see also overboil v., overbrim v., overclimb v., overflow v., overwell v.).   overbubble  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1800    W. Cowper tr.  Homer Iliad  xxi, in  Wks. 		(1835–7)	 XI–XII. 244  				The unctuous fluid overbubbling streams On all sides. a1842    W. Maginn Lord Byron's Combolio Introd., in  Misc. Writings 		(1855–7)	 II. 159  				Let some fame too o'erbubble On his pate, who great trouble (Behold it) hath taken In this catalogue making. 1890    W. E. Gladstone Diary 4 Nov. 		(1994)	 XII. 333  				He overbubbles with contentment. 1938    Bks. Abroad 12 381/2  				Gorky..had no control of his exuberance. His letters, like his early fiction, overbubble. 2016    A. A. Bridges  & A. S. Gladfelter in  A. S. Gladfelter Septins iv. 64  				Be very careful to watch reaction during this time making sure that it does not bubble over. If it starts to overbubble, remove solution from hot plate.   over-burst  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > action or operation > prosperity > advancement or progress > outdoing or surpassing > outdo or surpass			[verb (transitive)]		 > go beyond (bounds) transcenda1340 exceedc1374 overwenda1375 overpassa1382 passc1390 to pass beyond ——1429 outreacha1568 overlash1581 pretergress1583 outrun1589 overslipa1592 surpass1592 to step over ——1599 outstep?1611 outstrip1612 overrun1612 outpass1635 pose1636 over-burst1856 overact1858 overstride1925 1856    H. Conant Eng. Bible i. 16  				Outraged humanity has overburst the bounds of discreet submission. 1957    R. Walters Albert Gallatin xxii. 282  				His love for his adopted land overburst his reserve.  (ii)   Sometimes used of missing, passing over something without coming into contact with it, as overleap v., overshoot v., etc.  (iii)   Also figurative of surmounting or getting over an obstacle, an illness, a calamity, or the like, as overcome v.  (b)   Also in derived and related nouns and adjectives (see also overflow n., overflowing adj., oversight n.).   overbubbling  n. and adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1822    P. B. Shelley Cyclops in  Posthumous Poems 		(1824)	 344  				O'er bubbling Shall finely cook your miserable flesh. 1896    Godey's Mag. Feb. 158/1  				They showed such an over~bubbling of good-nature. 1916    R. H. Fife German Empire between 2 Wars 308  				All of which overbubbling enthusiasm of the epic period of the new empire found its classic expression in the..monument to the first emperor on the Schlossplatz in Berlin. 1956    J. T. Shipley Guide to Great Plays 776  				The younger brother..is especially well drawn. His youthful overbubbling excitement in love; the ardor with which he pursues his beloved; [etc.].   oversplash  n. and adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1888    C. H. Spurgeon Serm. in  Voice 		(N.Y.)	 31 May 7/1  				A sort of over-splash of the great fountain of mercy. 2002    Coventry Evening Tel. 		(Nexis)	 26 Sept. 14  				There are three problems: A leak to the bowl [of the fountain], the oversplash area and a mechanical fault.  f.   With the sense of motion forward and down, and hence of overturning, inversion. In verbs, as overbalance v., overbear v., overbeat v., overblow v.1, overcast v., overset v., overthrow v., overturn v., etc. Also in related nouns and adjectives, as overbearing adj., overfall n., overturned adj., etc.  g.   With the sense ‘down upon from above’. In verbs, as overcome v., overfall v., overgang v., overgo v., overleap v., overlook v., oversee v., etc.New formations in this sense are hardly found after 1600, although archaic revivals (e.g. overfall v. 1) do occur.  h.    (a)   Forming verbs with the sense ‘upon the surface generally, all over, so as to cover (wholly or partly), abound on, or be spread over’; used both with verbs expressing the action of covering, spreading, etc., and with nouns denoting the covering medium, substance, etc. See also overclothe v., overcloud v., overcover v., overglaze v., overgrow v., overheap v., overprint v., etc. ΚΠ a1851    D. M. Moir Child's Burial v  				That ‘the joy of grief’ (as Ossian sings) o'erbalm'd the very air. ΚΠ a1657    R. Lovelace Poems 		(1864)	 164  				Me thought she look'd all ore-bepatch'd with stars. ΚΠ 1613–18    S. Daniel Coll. Hist. Eng. 		(1626)	 6  				[Gildas] ouer-blacks them [sc. the Britons] with such vgly deformities. ΚΠ 1613    F. Robartes Revenue of Gospel 78  				If self-loue and couetousnesse did not ouerblind and entangle the men of this age. 1622    G. Wither Faire-virtue sig. H8v  				Their Reason ouer-blinded, By the pleasures of the Sence, Hides from them that excellence. ΚΠ 1558    T. Phaer tr.  Virgil Seuen First Bks. Eneidos  i. sig. B.iiijv  				His mother..with a roset youth his eies and countnaunce overcheared.   over-darken  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1574    A. Gilby tr.  Test. Twelue Patriarches sig. Diiii  				If you be ouerdarckened wyth wickednes. 1867    E. Sallesbury Children of Lake iv. 81  				A great shade Came creeping down her forehead; there it paused, And hung and overdarkened all her face. 1900    H. James Abasement of Northmores in  Soft Side i. 168  				The monument that had over-darkened her was reared, but it would be within a week..the derision of intelligent London. 1969    C. White Rembrandt as Etcher I.  vi. 163  				One might hazard a guess that he felt that he had over-darkened the background, losing the original mysterious atmosphere. 2017    G. Rupp Introd. Ess. in  R. E. Davies  & G. Rupp Hist. Methodist Church Great Brit. I. p. xv  				This historical pedigree of so-called ‘Reformers before the Reformation’ was always one-sidedly drawn... It overdarkened the shadows, and to that extent distorted the medieval scene.   overdash  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   now rareΚΠ a1592    R. Greene Orpharion 		(1599)	 42  				Linaments, whereupon this natiue colour was ouer-dasht. 1600    T. Middleton Ghost of Lucrece sig. C5v  				Lucrece, alas, thou picture of thy selfe, Drawne poore and pale by that old painter time, And ouerdasht by Death that meagre elfe. 1797    F. G. Waldron Virgin Queen  ii. iii. 41  				The thought of that would make me brave the night, Tho' rent-up rocks 'mid yesty waves o'erdash'd. 1885    Belgravia Feb. 398  				Probably Mrs. Inglefield is a little over-dashed with spirit—a trifle too strong, let us say—for every one's taste. 1914    G. A. Edwards Darkness & Dawn  ii. xii  				The further end of the ledge, overdashed with wild jets of spray and stinging drives of brine. 1946    J. Hjejle tr.  P. Johnson in  Videnskabelige Meddelelser fra Dansk Naturhistorisk Forening Københaven 109 2  				The rocky coasts of Bornholm, which in the most places form a wild, torn landscape..which during the violent autumn and winter gales is overrun or overdashed by the surf.   over-dust  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1609    W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida  iii. iii. 173  				And goe to dust, that is a little guilt, More laud then guilt  ore-dusted.       View more context for this quotation 1872    R. H. Horne Orion 		(ed. 9)	  iii. 157  				Those Whose feet still plod the earth with hearts o'erdusted. 1999    Omaha 		(Nebraska)	 World-Herald 15 July 38/1  				We found pizza overcooked..and the whole overdusted with salt or seasonings. 2010    Sunday Times 		(Nexis)	 10 Jan.  				Quaking pudding was a grey custard, overdusted with nutmeg.   over-encrust  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1874    A. H. Sayce Princ. Compar. Philol. viii. 304  				Concealed and over-encrusted..in the course of generations. 1930    R. J. Priest From Chariot to Car iii. 29  				The builders fell into great error in over-encrusting their work with every possible decorative device. 1962    Hansard Commons 		(Electronic ed.)	 28 Mar. 1389  				It [sc. the House of Lords] is over-encrusted with ancient pageantry and is becoming a sort of museum piece. 2000    Newsmakers No. 4. 236  				Jim Crace in the Times Literary Supplement criticized the book as being ‘over-encrusted with folksy hostility toward the twentieth century, always equating changes with ruin’. ΚΠ 1632    W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. x  				The Hals..most exquisitly ouer-filed, and indented with Mosaicall worke. ΚΠ 1843    D. M. Moir in  Blackwood's Mag. Dec. 749  				From Ascog's rocks, o'erflung with woodland bowers, With scarlet fuschias, and faint myrtle flowers. ΚΠ 1868    R. Browning Ring & Bk.  viii, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 X. 269  				The natural man may effervesce in ire, O'erflood earth, o'erfroth heaven with foamy rage. ΚΠ 1876    R. Browning Nat. Magic i  				Embowered With—who knows what verdure, o'erfruited, o'erflowered? ΚΠ 1609    W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida  v. iii. 57  				Their eyes ore-galled with recourse of  teares.       View more context for this quotation   over-gloss  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1811    G. Longmore War of Isles  iv. 92  				'Twas from that sophistry in power, he drew His fortunes, all o'erglossing with the hue Of misnam'd freedom. 1880    F. T. Palgrave Visions of Eng. 52  				Plaudits base Writ to their own disgrace, With casuist sneer o'erglossing works of blood. 1908    M. J. Cawein Woman of World in  Poems 151  				That lie, overglossed with a modesty borrowed, Assisted my fall and the end was—I fell. 1985    Pop. Sci. Mar. 79/2  				Don't over-gloss, thinking the gloss will wear off quickly:..the gloss you see is the gloss you will have for a long time. 2006    T. Schaffert Devils in Sugar Shop 159  				Back to the loft to gussy up, glittering their cheeks and over-glossing their puckers in Lee's bedroom. ΚΠ 1673    E. Hickeringill Gregory 145  				This realm was..overhurl'd with the new modern orthodox. ΚΠ 1824    T. L. Beddoes Let. 6 Dec. in  Wks. 		(1935)	 593  				Lost to all German and all humane learning, o'erhusked with sweet dozing sloth.   over-lace  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1810    J. Porter Sc. Chiefs II. i. 6  				They..gradually descended amid pouring torrents, and gaping chasms overlaced with brambles. 1914    H. Price Poems & Sonnets 190  				No thoughts are hers to urge unseemly haste, Her eyelids droop with bluest veins o'erlaced. 2002    Birmingham Post 		(Nexis)	 4 June 11  				The violent sizzling of burning meat, overlaced with the gasps of bright-eyed children. ΚΠ 1827    R. Pollok Course of Time II.  vii. 68  				O'er-lettered by the hand Of oft frequenting pilgrim.   over-moss  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1610    G. Fletcher Christs Victorie 53  				Our ships so over~moss't, and brands so deadly blown. 1865    W. J. Linton Claribel & Other Poems 72  				My heart this many a day O'ermoss'd with sorrow, like an ancient tomb. a1967    V. Watkins Still Garden in  Coll. Poems 		(1986)	 429  				Now..faith disinters Neglected lives oblivion overmossed. ΚΠ ?1550    H. Llwyd tr.  Pope John XXI Treasury of Healthe 		(1585)	 X ij  				Over noynt the burned place therewith, for it healeth wonderfullye. ΚΠ 1591    A. Fraunce Countesse of Pembrokes Yuychurch  i. ii. i  				My flesh's nought but a mark all ouerprickt with her arrowes. ΚΠ 1535    H. Latimer Serm. 21st Sunday Trinity in  Wks. I. 28  				How hath this truth over-rusted with the pope's rust? 1870    R. W. Buchanan Bk. of Orm in  Compl. Poet. Wks. 		(1901)	 I. 261  				The treeless hills, O'er rusted with the slow-decaying bracken. 1915    Publishers' Weekly 9 Oct. 1145/1  				Tin cans over-rusted the scanty grass.   over-scatter  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1861    Macmillan's Mag. 4 134/2  				I should ask to..overscatter a table-cover with exact likenesses of black bobs. 1998    What's New in Building 		(Nexis)	 May 82  				Three-component Bimagrip HD was then trowel applied and overscattered with Criggian granules. ΚΠ 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  vii. 371  				Over-sented with the fragrant ointment of this Prince's memory. ΚΠ a1813    A. Wilson Poems 		(1876)	 103  				The blatterin' hail, right fell an' fast, O'erscourg'd my face.   over-scratch  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1887    R. Browning in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 XVI. 260  				There's nobody..o'erscratches A sheepskin more nimbly and surely with ink. 1999    Los Angeles Times 		(Nexis)	 30 Apr.  b1  				The bus windows were so overscratched with graffiti that I could have seen better through the screened windows of the bus from the Twin Towers jail.   over-screen  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1906    T. Hardy Dynasts: Pt. 2nd  i. ii. 17  				Draw down the curtain, then, and overscreen This too-protracted verbal fencing-scene. 1941    J. P. Bishop Interior in  Coll. Poems 		(1975)	 99  				Through windows crossed by wires and overscreened With shadows.   over-scribble  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1823    W. Tennant Cardinal Beaton  iii. i. 84  				You may Have time to read your Latin Test'ments through, And over-scribble all the walls with texts. 1999    Evening Standard 		(Nexis)	 21 June 66  				So many layers—a slate overscribbled to distraction with history.   over-sculpture  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   rareΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-sculpture. 1957    Craft Horizons Feb. 38/2  				Designs in U.S. furniture tend to be too self-consciously ‘expressive’, over-severe or over-sculptured.   overseal  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1535    Bible 		(Coverdale)	 2 Esdras vi. 20  				Whan the worlde..shalbe ouersealed, then wyl I do these tokens. 1911    Gas World 2 Dec. 679/1  				If they..had the seals too high, they got big waves rushing to and fro, and the pipes would be possibly oversealed and there would be trouble. 1917    T. Hardy Moments of Vision & Misc. Verses 173  				The summers had oversealed All mark of them at last. 1982    P. Chaplais Eng. Medieval Diplomatic Pract. I. 356  				Treaty rolls..handed to Philip VI by the bishop of Lincoln on 1 November, were also oversealed with a small seal.   overshower  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1609    W. Shakespeare Pericles xviii. 26  				Pericles..With sighes shot through, and biggest teares ore-showr'd. Leaues Tharsus. 1823    ‘B. Cornwall’ Flood of Thessaly  ii. 47  				Curtains of trembling mist And azure-woven air came flowing down, O'er-shower'd with stars. 1924    L. Binyon Sirens  iii. 25  				Body bare Over-showered with beams so fine As cleanse the very heart of care. 1981    P. Y. Schmitt in  R. H. Perez Protocols Perinatal Nursing Pract. xix. 323/1  				The newborn in intensive care, despite the loud noises, continued light, and continual auditory stimulation, can develop a sensory deprivation from being overshowered with the wrong kind of stimuli. 2012    D. Tolin Face your Fears i. 12  				In addition to washing my hands and overshowering to remove any contamination, I began cleaning compulsively with bleach. ΚΠ eOE    tr.  Orosius Hist. 		(BL Add.)	  iii. x. 75  				Somnite..eall heora wæpn ofersylfredan. 1824    C. Wells Joseph & Brethren 		(1876)	  i. vi. 90  				Grave Time showers from his shaking hand The snow of age, o'ersilvering the crown. 1891    Anthony's Photogr. Bull. 28 Mar. 183  				Now my paper,..if properly silvered, will not measle, while if under-silvered it will be sure to have red measles, and if over-silvered there will be black measles. a1920    A. H. Bullen Weeping-cross 		(1921)	 24  				Jessamine flaunts gold by day, And birch o'ersilvers night! ΚΠ a1628    F. Greville Life of Sidney 		(1651)	 xiv. 176  				I beheld this grave subject..over-spangled with lightnesse. 1818    J. Keats Endymion  i. 33  				Her scarf..over-spangled with a million Of little eyes. 1858    Ladies' Repository Apr. 216/2  				A kind of natural association between the flowerlets that twinkle amid the meadow-grass..and those ‘lesser lights’ that over-spangle the ebon vault of night.   overspatter  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1883    Frank Leslie's Pleasant Hours 34 159/1  				How they chatter, chatter, chatter,..While the stars that over-spatter All the heavens hear their clatter In a soft and mild delight. 1918    J. W. Wiles tr.  I. Mažuranić Death of Smail Aga iv. 25  				His outthrust eye on the green grass did cry, And he was overspatter'd with red blood. 1977    C. Bennett et al.  Year-Round, All-Occasion Make your own Greeting Card Bk. 71  				Keep the brush angled toward the paper as you brush the bristles until the paper is evenly spattered. Don't overspatter. 2017    T. Cox 21st-cent. Yokel vi. 218  				The lawn had had its last mow of the year and paths and roads were overspattered with marauding leaf mess.   over-stamp  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1640    W. Lithgow Gushing Teares of Godly Sorrow sig. C2  				Listen to me, as to thy Lazar poore, Thats overstamp'd with seals, of scabs, and sores. 1935    Burlington Mag. June 288/1  				Over-stamping on Sheffield-made candlesticks the London date-letter 1775–6. 1989    Independent 9 Feb. 5/7  				Spanish currency from South America overstamped for England. ΚΠ 1783    F. G. Waldron Contin. Ben Jonson's Sad Shepherd  v. 98  				My Iris-robe, with stars and crescents bright O'er-studded. ΚΠ 1576    T. Newton tr.  L. Lemnie Touchstone of Complexions 43  				Their bodies..overwhealed and engraynd with loathsome blisters.   over-web  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1872    R. Browning Fifine cxxxi, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 XI. 339  				Its mullions wink o'erwebbed with bloomy greenness. 1887    A. Hayes Last Crusade 81  				A giant fan Of silver ribs o'erwebbed with opal gauze. 1997    Times Union 		(Albany, N.Y.)	 		(Nexis)	 31 Aug.  h1  				Thin fog overwebbed the valley as the surface of the Hudson released its heat.   over-wipe  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1532    T. More Confut. Barnes in  Wks. 		(1557)	 797/2  				Those synnes onely whiche are with the pencell of daily prayer ouerwyped. 1996    Re: Cookies, Forms, Refresh, & Reload: MSIE Bites. in  comp.infosystems.www.authoring.cgi 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 27 June  				Hey, if [the company] can overwipe stuff with hidden installs, why not you?  (b)   With verbal nouns (and nouns closely associated with verbs), forming nouns (see also overclouding n., overgrowth n., etc.); and with participial adjectives, forming adjectives (see also overgrown adj., overlying adj., etc.).   overinked adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1878    W. D. Richmond Gram. Lithogr.  i. xiv. 103  				Quick and light rolling combined has the greatest effect in clearing an already over-inked job. 1890    W. Morris in  J. W. Mackail Life W. Morris 		(1899)	 II. 249  				I inclose a specimen (over-inked) of as far as we have gone at present. 1925    Scott's Standard Postage Stamp Catal. 		(ed. 81)	 1853/1  				Poor Impressions, Overinked and Spotted. 2000    L. Blacklow New Dimensions Photo Processes 		(ed. 3)	 xi. 157  				Using crumpled plastic wrap to dab overinked areas can aid in achieving the etching-like appearance. ΚΠ 1567    T. Drant tr.  Horace Arte of Poetrie sig. Bij  				Correcting, and perfyting them With ouernotynge hande.   overscribble  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1890    E. Johnson Rise Christendom ii. 39  				We may distinguish in this great palimpsest the old Roman Scripture from the monkish over-scribble. 1973    Computerworld 28 Nov. 9/2  				Some overscribbles on my ‘Santiago, Moscow and Ottawa’ column..—the ‘How can you be so stupid?’ kind of thing. 2000    Oil-Indust. Hist. 1 43/1  				In the original claim the inkblot and overscribble cover what seems to be ‘To whom’.   over-wooded adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1800    S. T. Coleridge This Lime-tree Bower in  Ann. Anthol. 2 140  				The roaring dell, o'erwooded, narrow, deep. a1873    F. G. Tuckerman Garden Lodge in  Sonnets 		(1931)	  v. 150  				The low-built cottage buried in the vale, Wooded and over-wooded.  (c)   Forming nouns, with concrete nouns denoting the covering object, medium, substance, etc. See also overcloth n., overcoat n., overcover n., overgarment n., overglaze n., overlayer n., overpaint n., overshirt n., overshoe n., overwrap n.   (occasionally in attributive use, as overcup n.); esp. with reference to layers of clothing, in the sense ‘worn over or above’, ‘upper or outer’. Cf. over adj. 1c.   over-bolster  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1917    D. H. Lawrence in  Seven Arts July 280  				A single bed, opened for the night, the white over-bolster piled back.   overbodice  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > 			[noun]		 > bodice > other corset1299 overbody1535 jupon1542 jup1603 Pierrot?1789 chemisette1796 spencer1799 jupe1810 jelick1816 railly1819 rail1820 Zouave1859 Basque1860 casaque1872 casaquin1879 overbodice1897 choli1907 halter1935 tube top1974 boob tube1977 bustier1978 1897    Westm. Gaz. 15 July 3/2  				A design demanding some skill in the arrangement of its overbodice. 1995    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 26 Dec.  f6  				The dress has a loose-fitting bodice with a shaped, dropped-waist overbodice of princess seaming.   over-boot  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1841    E. Rigby Resid. Shores Baltic I. x. 223  				The little feet..swell to misshapen stumps beneath an accumulation of under-socks and over-socks, under-shoes and over-boots. 1888    Harper's Mag. Feb. 363/1  				The man wears a long gray homespun coat..and huge elephantine overboots of cloth. 1989    New Scientist 11 Mar. 73/4  				In east Greenland, hunters traditionally wore complete outfits of polar bear skin—hooded jacket, mittens, trousers and over-boots for winter hunting.   over-cape  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1894    Daily News 10 Sept. 6/5  				A beautiful cape..made with a shorter over-cape of grey cloth bordered with a jet fringe. 1976    San Antonio 		(Texas)	 Express 2 Oct.  b1/4  				A completely traditional cape of heavy wool cloth with a sort of overcape.   over-collar  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1894    Daily News 21 Nov. 6/3  				An over-collar of Venetian point is laid upon the velvet. 1969    Sears, Roebuck Catal. Spring–Summer 27  				Diagonal-weave Coat, trim and smart with its double-breasted styling, white overcollar and semi-fitted lines.   over-gaiter  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1860    G. W. Hawes Ohio State Gazetteer for 1860–61 913/1  				Ladies' & Gents' Over-Shoes, Over-Gaiters, Congress, Button and Laced Gaiters. 1908    ‘O. Henry’ Voice of City 233  				It was Rosalie, in..gray walking suit, and tan oxfords with lavender overgaiters. 1997    Re: Backcountry Ski Gear in  rec.backcountry 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 27 Jan.  				For leather boots, overgaiters are a good way to keep feet warm and dry.   over-gown  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1893    E. Arnold Adzuma  iii. vii. 130  				I am designing birds and trees, Go Inkyô Sama! for an over-gown. 1984    J. Nunn Fashion in Costume 63  				In the 1670s, when the over-gown or mantua found favour.   over-jacket  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > textiles and clothing > clothing > types or styles of clothing > clothing for body or trunk (and limbs) > 			[noun]		 > jacket > other duffel coat1683 duffel jacket1732 petenlair1753 grego1767 wamus1805 camisole1816 over-jacket1830 matinee1851 Zouave1859 paletot1863 blazer1880 Norfolks1902 letter sweater1914 letter jacket1934 bomber jacket1940 shirt-jac1944 samfu jacket1955 guru jacket1966 Mao jacket1967 1830    J. Elliott Hist. Sketches District Columbia 209  				The clothing for each convict shall be a roundabout, or over jacket, a vest and pantaloons, made of wool, for the winter. 1885    Cent. Mag. July 414/1  				Their sheep-skin over-jackets and cloaks hang behind them on their horses. 1976    Scotsman 27 Dec. 8/3 		(advt.)	  				Cold store workers use polar wear fibre pile clothing, superb for all winter activities—over jackets from only £11.40.   over-jumper  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1975    Times 7 Oct. 11/4  				Over-jumper with wide sleeves..and a square neck. 1996    Northern Echo 		(Nexis)	 20 June 10  				On the shoulders that carry the world's quickest bowlers' over-jumpers, sit the troubles of the world.   over-mitt  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1971    C. Bonington Annapurna South Face 298  				Gloves with waterproof over-mitts are standard. 1994    Up Here 		(Yellowknife, N.W. Territories)	 Nov. 20/1  				Then we donned parkas and, finally, huge fur overmitts, attached to a long cord around our necks.   over-sock  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1841    E. Rigby Resid. Shores Baltic I. x. 222  				The little feet..swell to misshapen stumps beneath an accumulation of under-socks and over-socks, undershoes and over-boots. 1929    Footwear Organiser Jan. 31 		(heading)	  				The Oversock vogue spreads throughout the country. 1993    Equinox Oct. 27 		(advt.)	  				Be sure to wear Gore-Tex footwear or oversocks.  i.   With verbs, in the sense of motion over a surface generally, so as to cover in whole or part; also of motion to and fro upon or all over something; see also overblow v.1, overbrede v., overgang v., overglide v., over-range v., override v., overrun v., oversweep v., etc.; also in related nouns and adjectives (see also overthrust n., overthrust adj., etc.). ΚΠ 1850    E. B. Browning Soul's Trav. viii  				Banks too steep To be o'erbrowzèd by the sheep. ΚΠ 1632    W. Lithgow Totall Disc. Trav. v. 229  				That Orient maiesty arising to ouercirculate the earth. ΚΠ a1500						 (c1425)						    Andrew of Wyntoun Oryg. Cron. Scotl. 		(Nero)	  iv. l. 528  				And let þe Persoyis..His landys oure ryot and oure ryde. 1840    R. Browning Sordello  i. 216  				Too sure to over-riot and confound..each brilliant islet with itself. 1894    J. Davidson Unhist. Pastoral  v. i. 63  				This temple, wherein all might minister, Should be o'er-rioted, abused, profaned.   over-rush  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1634    J. Russell Two Famous Pitcht Battels Lypsich & Lutzen 27  				Then forward on with rage and force they push, And their fear-strucken foes soon over-rush. 1874    A. T. de Vere Alexander  v. x. 229  				He, swifter than the morn O'er-rushed the globe. 1987    A. R. Ammons Tertiaries in  Sumerian Vistas 66  				I still have Next to nothing, heaps of verbal glitterment, Rushes of feeling overrushing feeling. ΚΠ a1592    R. Greene Frier Bacon 		(1594)	 sig. H4  				To scud and ouer-scoure the earth in post. 1852    R. Kelsey Alfred of Wessex I.  vi. 220  				 Snap their restraining halters, through the streams Plunge, overscour the plains, upclimb the mounts.   overskim  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1822    W. Tennant Thane of Fife  i. 34  				He with his navy has o'er-skimm'd the seas. 1872    R. Browning Fifine xxxii, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 XI. 242  				I call attention to my dress, Coiffure, outlandish features,..all that eye-glance over-skims. 1899    R. Broughton Dr. Cupid xxvii. 269  				That five years' abyss between them;..which, though she may skirt it round, or lightly overskim it, will none the less ever, ever be there. 1966    Brit. Foundryman 59 47/3  				Use perforated skimming ladles and do not overskim. 2003    Aquarium Fish Mag. Aug. 59/1  				Do not overskim. Although there are gigantic skimmers available, use a skimmer that fits your aquarium. ΚΠ 1811    T. J. Hogg Life Shelley 		(1858)	 I. 383  				Without..employing any kind of declamation, overslurring, or sophistry.   over-trail  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1832    Ld. Tennyson Lady of Shalott  i, in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 10  				The little isle is..overtrailed With roses. 1884    A. T. de Vere Joan of Arc in  Poet. Wks. VI. 340  				A rose o'er-trailed that wall Painted with warlike deeds a century later. 1894    Littell's Living Age 26 May 482/2  				We glided under brambled banks overtrailed with the wild vine. ΚΠ 1855    R. Browning in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 VI. 194  				Yet there's the dye, in that rough mesh, The sea has only just o'erwhispered! 1890    J. Todhunter Sicilian Idyll 22  				Redder your lips Than coral just o'erwhispered by the surge.  j.    (a)   With the sense ‘across, from side to side, to the other side’; see also overbring v., overcarve v., overcross v., overdraw v.				 [Compare classical Latin trāns   (see trans- prefix).]			 ΚΠ 1840    R. Browning Sordello  i. 662  				Thus thrall reached thrall: He o'erfestooning every interval.   over-link  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1577    R. Willes  & R. Eden tr.  Peter Martyr of Angleria Hist. Trauayle W. & E. Indies f. 247v  				A bridge made of many barges, ouerlinked all togeather with two mighty cheyns. 1997    Sydney Morning Herald 		(Nexis)	 23 Oct. 12  				This beautiful old property, circa 1874, overlinks the Hawkesbury River. ΚΠ 1593    Tell-Trothes New-yeares Gift 		(1876)	 29  				Loyalty recovereth a world of oversplit infirmities.  (b)   With corresponding nouns and adjectives, as overcut n., etc.  k.    (a)   With the sense of bringing over to a particular view, opinion, party, etc. In verbs (see also over-bribe v., over-entreat v., overpersuade v.). Occasionally formed with nouns, as overmoney v. ΚΠ 1619    M. Drayton Barrons Wars 		(rev. ed.)	  vi. lxii. 90  				Phœbus she said was ouer-forc'd by Art. ΚΠ 1610    G. Fletcher Christs Victorie 8  				The Iudge might partiall be, and ouer-pray'd. ΘΚΠ the mind > will > motivation > attraction, allurement, or enticement > attract, allure, or entice			[verb (transitive)]		 > away ofdraw?c1225 spana1250 to draw awayc1384 slock1483 steal1526 over-tempt1643 1643    J. Milton Doctr. Divorce 22  				Lest the soul of a Christian..should be over tempted and cast away. 1749    H. Fielding Tom Jones VI.  xviii. ii. 176  				A small Breach of Friendship which he had been over-tempted to  commit.       View more context for this quotation  (b)   So with corresponding nouns and adjectives, as overpersuasion n., etc.  l.   With the sense of ‘across a (physical) boundary’; hence also figurative of transgression; as overgang v., overgo v., overlash v., etc. Also in derivatives, as overstepping n.  m.    (a)   With the sense ‘beyond a point or limit, further than’; in verbs (see also overfly v., overgo v., overgrow v., overreach v.). Also in derivatives (see also overgoing n.). ΚΠ 1775    J. Adair Hist. Amer. Indians 310  				The hunter..makes off to a sappling, which the bear by over-clasping cannot climb.  (b)   Prefixed to a singular numeral and used attributively with reference to people whose age in years exceeds that number; also prefixed to corresponding plural numbers and used as n. to denote such a person (usually in plural). ΚΠ 1925    Times 20 May 12/2  				How will the proposed exclusion affect the ‘over fifties’, even some of the ‘over forties’? 1927    Times 17 Nov. 7/3  				In the over 60 class Edward Blackwell was a triton among minnows. 1940    R. Graves  & A. Hodge Long Week-end xvii. 303  				The Evening News..throwing open its columns to the over-forties. 1975    B. Meyrick Behind Light xiv. 183  				After the boys' competitions, where I came in second in the over-twelves, came..community hymn singing. 1993    Omni Oct. 89/1  				The over-forty, past the age of innocence, no-nonsense woman who had seen it all.  n.   With the sense of overtake v.   In overcatch v., overget v., overhale v., overhaul v., overhent v., overhie v., overnim v.				 [In a small group of synonymous verbs, including overtake v., earlier overnim v., and later overhent v., overget v., overcatch v., and overhale v., the second element means ‘to take’   or ‘to catch’  ; the original application being apparently to the running down and catching of a fugitive or hunted animal: compare the synonymous to catch up 5 at catch v. Phrasal verbs 1.  o.   With the sense of overhear v.   So in overlisten v., oversee v.  p.   With the sense ‘all through’ (something extended), ‘through the extent of’, ‘from beginning to end’; in verbs, such as overlook v., overname v., overpass v., over-read v., overview v.  q.   With the senses ‘through’, ‘to the end of, over the period of’ in time; ‘to an end or issue’, ‘to extinction’ (= out- prefix 3b(b)); in verbs (see also overpass v., overrun v., oversey v.). ΚΠ 1818    H. H. Milman Samor  vii. 171  				As though they had o'erdream'd The churlish winter.   over-dure  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   now rareΚΠ 1633    J. Done tr.  ‘Aristeas’ Aunc. Hist. Septuagint 197  				But this Story of Aristeus hath ouer-dured those flames. 1909    J. Payne Outgate in  Flower o' Thorn 78  				In her approof I rest secure Who destined is to overdure The insect hum and fret of men.   over-last  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1613–16    W. Browne Britannia's Pastorals  iii, in  Whole Wks. 		(1868)	 146  				The glasses..Were all of ice not made to overlast One supper. 1885    R. Bridges Eros & Psyche  xi. x. 134  				She begs but what shall well o'erlast a day. 1989    Scotl. on Sunday 28 May 13  				A quite untypical boom in Scotland that was going to overlast a downturn in the rest of the UK. ΚΠ a1425    Medulla Gram. 		(Stonyhurst)	 f. 1v  				Absumo, to ouerwaste. 1619    M. Drayton Barons Warres  vi. lxxiii, in  Poems 93  				None regarded to maintaine the Light, Which being ouer-wasted, was gone out. 1621    T. Mun Disc. Trade in  J. R. McCulloch Early Eng. Tracts Comm. 		(1952)	  i. 5  				Where a contrary course is taken, through wantonnesse and riot, to ouerwaste both forren and domesticke wares.  r.   With the sense ‘beyond (in time)’, ‘too long’, ‘too late’; in verbs (see also overbide v., overkeep v., overlive v., overstay v.); occasionally with the sense ‘until the following day, overnight’. In nouns in the sense ‘surviving’, such as over-belief n. ΘΚΠ the world > time > a suitable time or opportunity > untimeliness > 			[verb (intransitive)]		 > be late over-tarry1843 to run early, on time, etc.1876 1843    E. Bulwer-Lytton Last of Barons II.  iv. iv. 49  				I have over-tarried, good my lord. ΚΠ 1826    W. Scott Woodstock 		(1832)	 xii. 221  				I mean my Lord Cromwell's way, of over-quartering his men in the towns he marches through.  s.   With the sense ‘remaining over’ or ‘in addition or excess’, ‘surplus’, ‘extra’; in nouns (see also overdeal n., overmatter n., overtime n., etc.); also with verbs, as overleave v.   over-hours  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ society > occupation and work > work > times or periods of work > 			[noun]		 > work beyond regular hours over-hours1762 overtime1791 Morrison hour1949 1762    in  C. W. Hatfield Hist. Notices Doncaster 		(1866)	 I. 203  				Gave the workmen..for working over-hours, one shilling. 1832    H. Martineau Homes Abroad v. 74  				I am soon to begin building you a house at over hours. 1903    Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. 66 286  				Up to 1855 all old wood was carted free. Subsequently over-hours were paid for and cartage was charged. ΘΚΠ society > trade and finance > fees and taxes > payment for labour or service > 			[noun]		 > extra payments > for overtime overtime1791 over-wages1817 1817    W. Scott Let. 11 Aug. 		(1933)	 IV. 496  				The task of maintaining a poor rendered effeminate and vicious by over wages and over-living. 1856    F. L. Olmsted Journey Slave States 103  				All that they choose to do more than this they are paid for..; and invariably this over-wages is used by the slave for himself... Nearly all gained by overwork $5 a month.  t.   With the notion of repetition, ‘over again’; in verbs (see also overact v., overhear v., over-read v., oversay v.); also in participial adjectives; and in nouns denoting something which is repeated, as overcome n.1, overword n.  (a)   ΚΠ OE    Blickling Homilies 15  				We hit sceolan eft ofercweþan.  (b)     over-fought adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1902    Westm. Gaz. 3 Dec. 4/2  				There is something of an over-fought battle, and a slaying of the slain.  u.   With the sense of overcoming, putting down, or getting the better of, by means of the action or thing expressed; Frequently poetic.Many modern English formations in this sense are archaic.It is possible that overburden, overcark, overload, overweigh, and the like, belong originally here, rather than to sense  2b(a).  (a)   In verbs; see also overawe v., over-brave v., overdare v., overface v., etc. ΚΠ 1876    J. S. Blackie Songs Relig. & Life 202  				To overbray The voice of grave authority. ΚΠ 1603    J. Florio tr.  M. de Montaigne Ess.  i. xxx. 102  				We have altogether over-choaked hir [sc. Nature].   over-cow  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-cow. a1915    S. Phillips Harold 		(1927)	  ii. i. 54  				What over-cows thee, man? Must we believe That thou dost shake at cowls of Norman priests? ΚΠ 1605    J. Marston Dutch Courtezan  iii. i  				There is your husband, who sent me in all hast, least you should be ouer frighted with his fayning, to come to dinner to him. 1709    Ld. Shaftesbury Sensus Communis: Ess. Freedom of Wit 43  				This..cou'd never have been acted but by mean Spirits, such as had been held in awe, and over-frighted by the Magi. ΚΠ 1794    J. Williams Shrove Tuesday 3  				When..lesser planets Phœbus had o'erlumed. ΚΠ a1667    A. Cowley Of Greatness in  Ess. in Verse & Prose 		(1687)	 126  				No Mirth or Musick over~noise your Fears. a1711    T. Ken Hymns for Festivals in  Wks. 		(1721)	 I. 197  				The Curetes over-nois'd his cry, Lest his own sire should to devour him fly. ΚΠ 1666    W. Boghurst Loimographia 		(1894)	 59  				Overstifling and weakening people with too much sweating. ΚΠ 1590    E. Spenser Faerie Queene  i. vii. sig. Gv  				When life recouer'd had the raine, And ouer-wrestled his strong enimy. 1828    N. Webster Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang.  				[citing Spenser] Overwrestle, to subdue by wrestling. [Also in later dictionaries.]]			  (b)   So in participial adjectives. ΚΠ 1834    T. Pringle Afr. Sketches x. 312 		(note)	  				One feels oneself fairly ‘overcowed’, and dare not even aspire to be heard. ΚΠ 1632    F. Quarles Divine Fancies 		(1660)	  ii. xxxii. 64  				She smiles, she wonders, being overdaz'd With his bright beams, stands silent, stands amaz'd. ΚΠ 1875    M. J. Preston Cartoons 8  				The world is over-deaved with speech. ΚΠ 1817    W. Wordsworth Vernal Ode iv  				To lie and listen—till o'er-drowsèd sense Sinks, hardly conscious of the influence. 1876    E. Dowden In July in  Poems 116  				But murmurings low of inarticulate moods, Softer than stir of unfledged cushat broods, Breathe, till o'erdrowsed the heavy flower-heads bend.   over-warred adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1589    W. Warner Albions Eng. 		(new ed.)	  v. xxv. 112  				The chiefe and grauest of the Peeres, did ouer-warred flye Into the Woods. 1897    F. Thompson New Poems 55  				I, so star-weary, over-warred,..only stand aside and grieve.  2.   With the sense of ‘over or beyond’ in degree or quality; hence, of surpassing, excelling, exceeding, excess.  a.   With the sense ‘so as to surpass’.  (a)    (i)   With the sense of doing some action over or beyond another agent, of going beyond, surpassing, or excelling in the action of the simple verb. In verbs; see also overbid v., overleap v., overruff v., overrun v., oversmite v. ΚΠ 1582    R. Stanyhurst tr.  Virgil First Foure Bookes Æneis  i. 9  				Herpalicee, sweeft Queene, steeds strong ouerambling. ΚΠ 1592    T. Nashe Pierce Penilesse 		(Brit. Libr. copy)	 sig. E4v  				He so farre outstript him in villainous words, and ouer-bandied him in bitter terms. ΚΠ 1652    W. Sclater Civil Magistr. 		(1653)	 2  				The sparkling of the one, overblazed the duskishnesse of the other. 1842    Bentley's Misc. Feb. 168  				The Countess would shrink from being over-blazed [by another's diamonds]. ΚΠ 1550    J. Heywood Hundred Epigrammes liv. sig. Bviiiv  				Whan euer thou wouldest seeme, to ouer crow me, Than will I surely ouer cakyll the. ΚΠ 1628    J. Shirley Wittie Faire One  i. ii  				An hundred nightingales Shall fall down dead..For grief to be o'er-chanted. ΚΠ 1854    S. Dobell Balder xix, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1875)	 II. 87  				Because ye overcried the voice of Right, Because ye clapped your hands when strong men lied. 1880    J. A. J. Neafie Harolde  v. iii. 81  				Shriek to the listless winds—O'ercry the sea. ΚΠ 1567    W. Painter Palace of Pleasure II. xxi. f. 141  				It might..lenifie that corrosiue humor, which with frowning face, forceth you to ouerperke your humble suppliants. 1571    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Psalmes of Dauid with Comm. (xlviii. 3)  				That that gorgeousnesse or that loftines overperk not Gods power. ΚΠ 1844    E. B. Browning Lady Geraldine's Courtship xii  				When a sudden silver speaking, gravely cadenced, over-rung them. 1864    Fraser's Mag. Nov. 636  				My voice will come across the dark And through the day-dawn's glimmer O'er-ring the sound of the lengthening swell.   over-scream  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   rareΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-scream. ΚΠ 1604    T. Middleton Ant & Nightingale sig. C4  				He walkt the chamber with such a pestilent Gingle, that his Spurs ouersqueakt the Lawyer. ΘΚΠ the world > physical sensation > sight and vision > seeing or looking > see			[verb (transitive)]		 > stare or gaze at bestarec1220 bigapea1250 to gape atc1290 fix14.. to stick one's eyes in (also into)c1485 attacha1500 porec1500 to take feeding (of)c1500 stare1510 (to have) in gaze1577 gaze1591 outstare1596 over-stare1600 devour1628 trysta1694 ogle1795 begaze1802 toise1888 fixate1889 rubberneck1897 eyeball1901 1600    W. Shakespeare Merchant of Venice  ii. i. 27  				I would ore-stare the sternest eyes that looke: Out-braue the hart most daring on the  earth.       View more context for this quotation  (ii)   In verbs formed on nouns, with the sense of surpassing in, or in the role of; see also overwit v.   over-bulk  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1609    W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida  i. iii. 314  				The seeded pride..must or now be cropt, Or shedding breede a noursery of like euill, To ouer-bulk vs  all.       View more context for this quotation 2002    www.clevelandskyscrapers.com 7 Oct. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				Although carefully designed so as not to overtop the Terminal Tower, the building ‘overbulked’ the Terminal with its large size. ΚΠ 1637    J. Milton Comus 25  				The heards would over-multitude [printed inultitude] their Lords.  (iii)   In ad hoc phrases in which a noun is used as a verb and then repeated (occasionally with a distinguishing suffix) as its object (cf. out- prefix 4c(a),   4c(c)), as to over-gospel the gospel, etc. Now rare. ΚΠ 1647    N. Ward Simple Cobler Aggawam 17  				He will outlaw the Law,..over-Gospell the Gospell. 1735    T. Sheridan in  Swift's Lett. 		(1768)	 IV. 124  				My two puppies have..overpuppied their puppyships. 1827    R. Southey Select. from Lett. 		(1856)	 IV. 17  				This is over-Macphersoning Macpherson.  (b)   In reflexive verbs with the sense of surpassing oneself, i.e. one's former or ordinary achievements, one's capacity, strength, etc.; often with the sense of exhausting oneself by the action; see also overbloom v., overdrink v., overeat v., oversleep v.Sometimes merely with the sense of doing something to excess or too much; cf. sense  2b(a)(i). ΚΠ 1843    A. Bethune Sc. Peasant's Fire-side 257  				If one of the former happened to have overfeasted himself upon a ‘rotten sheep’. ΚΠ 1843    W. M. Thackeray Irish Sketch-bk. 		(1900)	 V. xx. 466  				Mill-owners over-mill themselves. ΚΠ 1853    C. M. Yonge Heir of Redclyffe I. xii. 199  				She has over-polked herself in London, and is sent here for quiet and country air. ΚΠ a1643    J. Shute Judgem. & Mercy 		(1645)	 119  				Men have so oversotted themselves, that..they have turned the courses of men.  (c)    (i)   With the sense ‘more than’: in verbs (see also overbalance v., overmatch v., overmate v.).   over-conquer  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1612    W. Sclater Christians Strength Ep. Ded. sig. A2  				Wee fight not against flesh and bloud: wee encounter and conquer, yea overconquer the God of this world. 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-compensate,..-conquer. 2002    www.pbc.org 5 Nov. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				The driving notion of this verse [sc. Romans 8:37] is the verb hypernikomen, literally ‘we overconquer.’ ΚΠ 1602    R. Carew Surv. Cornwall  i. f. 64v  				The women would be verie loth to come behinde the fashion, in newfanglednes..if not in costlynes,..which perhaps might ouer-empty their husbands purses. ΚΠ 1716    M. Davies Athenæ Britannicæ II. 186  				Bona is over-equall'd by Bishops Kidder and Ken. ΚΠ 1647    J. Trapp Comm. Epist. & Rev. (Rom. viii. 37)  				We do over-overcome, because through faith in Christ we overcome before we fight. ΚΠ 1620    J. Ford Line of Life 107  				Nor shall [it] euer [be] ouer-paralleled by any age succeeding.   over-satisfy  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1615    Bp. J. Hall No Peace with Rome xii, in  Recoll. Treat. 866  				Who can abide that any mortall man should ouer-satisfie God for his sins? 1920    Ann. Missouri Bot. Garden 7 55  				Beyond this point this hydration capacity is over-satisfied and the moisture over and above that absorbed by the fibre is adsorbed by the surfaces exposed.  (ii)   In adjectives; see also overdue adj., overfull adj.   overcomplete adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1866    G. Stephens Old-Northern Runic Monuments I.  i. 280  				The alphabet thus inscribed being occasionally incomplete or overcomplete. 1949    Amer. Econ. Rev. 39 493  				The propensity to import may tend to produce an incomplete adjustment to decreases in exports and an overcomplete adjustment to increases. ΚΠ 1683    J. Dryden  & N. Lee Duke of Guise  i. i. 7  				Such an habitual over-Womanly Goodness.  (d)   With the sense ‘exceedingly, beyond measure, lavishly’. In verbs 				 [often after classical Latin compounds in super-  super- prefix]			 (see also overabound v., overflourish v., over-glad v., over-grieve v., overhigh v., overjoy v.); and adjectives (see also overdear adj.). Now archaic, the sense having usually passed into  2b(a). ΚΠ a1656    Bp. J. Hall Invisible World 		(1659)	  iii. i. 134  				Those over-excelling glories of the good Angels.   over-glorious adj. ΚΠ 1633    J. Ford 'Tis Pitty shee's Whore  v. sig. Kv  				How ouer-glorious art thou in thy wounds, Tryumphing ouer infamy and hate! 1874    Catholic World Oct. 132/1  				The defeat of an over-glorious nation, crushed to despair. 1929    Amer. Polit. Sci. Rev. 23 895  				The party was fighting what all knew to be a difficult, defensive battle after a not over-glorious tenure of office.  (e)   With the sense ‘to a greater extent, or at a greater rate, than is usual, natural, or intended; too far’. In verbs, such as overact v., overbid v., overbuy v., overcarry v., overcount v., overenter v., overesteem v., overestimate v., overhold v., overlaunch v., overpay v., overprize v., overrate v., oversell v., etc. In adjectives, such as over-awful adj., etc.Now largely indistinguishable from  2b(a)   and  2b(b).  b.   With the sense ‘in or to excess, too much, too’. Now a leading sense of over- in combination with verbs, adjectives, nouns, and adverbs.In modern English very common with a negative (esp. in adjectives and their derivatives), as in not over-brave, not over-obliging, not over-pleased (in, e.g., ‘he was not over-pleased with the result’), in which not over- is used by litotes for ‘not quite enough’, ‘somewhat deficiently’; not over-wise = somewhat lacking in wisdom.In Old English it occurs in many adjectives, a few verbs, and numerous derivative or other nouns. In Old English (as in the cognate languages) over was in true combination; its generalized use in modern English renders it much more a distinct element, often merely in syntactical combination, so that, except in a few words of old standing, it is usually joined with a hyphen to the word which it qualifies.  (a)    (i)   With verbs (both transitive and intransitive), and with nouns or adjectives used as verbs. Many verbs arose in Middle English; those treated as main entries include overcark v., overcharge v., overdrive v., overheat v., overlade v., overpraise v.   In the 16th cent. such formations began to abound, as overblow v.1, overboil v., overburden v., over-busy v., overcloy v., over-cram v., overdare v., overeat v., over-fear v., overgorge v., over-labour v., overload v., over-love v., overreach v., over-roast v., etc. Some of the occasional formations listed below date from before 1600 (and a few from before 1500); after 1600 it was effectively possible to prefix over- in this sense to any verb whose sense allowed it.A few such verbs occur in Old English, e.g. overdo v., overdrink v., overfill v., ofersīeman v.; some of these, however, only approach this sense, or can be otherwise explained.   over-accentuate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1870    Atlantic Monthly Dec. 720/1  				The only error in pronunciation is in ‘reduplicating’, the third syllable having been over-accentuated. 1977    Gramophone Jan. 1160/1  				If anything the conductor over-accentuates at the expense of broader phrasing. ΚΠ 1645    Bp. J. Hall Remedy Discontentm. xiii. 69  				Hee that over-afflicts his body, kills a Subject.   over-agonize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1758    Herald No. 19 		(1758)	 2 59  				He [sc. the modern actor] over-agonizes dying, and many ways debases his own excellencies, to extort applause from the injudicious. 2002    Village Voice 		(N.Y.)	 14 Aug.  				All of the characters are stuck in narrative holding patterns, over-agonizing about their situations.   over-answer  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1711    J. Anderson Countrey-man's Let. to Curat 75  				Lay these two together, and I hope your Author is over answered, and that it is plain, the Service of the Common Prayers and the English Service were two things. 2000    Family Planning Perspectives 32 258/2  				Parents often ‘overanswer’ questions because they interpret them as much more complex and profound than they actually are.   over-argue  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1645    S. Rutherford Tryal & Triumph of Faith 		(1845)	 55  				We are not either to over-argue or to under-argue, neither to faint nor despise. 1997    G. G. Osborn in  R. C. Ward Found. Osteopathic Med. xi. 163/2  				It has been over-argued as a feature of coronary artery disease.   over-assess  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1898    Westm. Gaz. 2 Sept. 2/3  				When he went into a house in the district he was over-assessed by the water company. 1981    Amer. Banker 		(Nexis)	 10 July 8  				A U.S. bank, in examining a foreign firm with a financial structure, accounting policies and management-style different from its clients, may overassess the risk elements.   over-bake  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1598    tr.  G. de Rosselli Epulario L ij  				But let them not bee ouerbaked. 1876    C. C. Robinson Gloss. Words Dial. Mid-Yorks. 30/2  				Dêazed bread is overbaked outwardly, and not enough baked within. 1995    Guardian 11 Nov. (Weekend Suppl.) 55/2  				The superb baked quality the pinotage grape often achieves is not overbaked here. ΚΠ 1593    T. Nashe Christs Teares f. 27v  				Should I ouer-blacke mine Incke, perplexe pale Paper..with the sadde tedious recitall?   over-blame  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1848    E. C. Gaskell Mary Barton II. v. 77  				And mind, wench! I don't over-blame him for this. 1896    A. Newton et al.  Dict. Birds: Pt. IV Introd. 35  				We must not over-blame those who caused it. 1962    Punch 21 Feb. 326/1  				Guy Fawkes, he said, was overblamed.   over-boast  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-boast. 1981    Jrnl. Marriage & Family 43 616/2  				A tendency to say nice things about each other and not to over-boast about oneself.   over-borrow  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1867    Jrnl. Statist. Soc. 30 175  				The United States, like many other people in extremity, overborrowed. 1994    Daily Tel. 13 Dec. 27/2  				Don't invest in something you don't understand. Don't over-borrow against the assets, even for a sure thing.   over-brown  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1806    ‘Ignotus’ Culina 		(ed. 3)	 117  				Take care that it be not overbrowned. 1816    W. Scott Antiquary III. xii. 250  				Her father..had wrought himself into a violent passion because the toast was over-browned. 1998    30 All Time Great Recipes 		(BBC Good Food)	 Autumn 13/4  				If the pie starts to over-brown, cover it with foil.   over-brush  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1855    E. C. Gaskell North & South I. vii  				She owed it to herself to..speak courteously from time to time to this stranger; not over-brushed, nor over-polished, it must be confessed. 1991    Do it Yourself Feb. 50/1  				Never overbrush the finish since this can spread out the paint too thinly.   over-characterize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1959    Times 9 Nov. 6/1  				To begin with they [sc. the figures] are heavily over-characterized (by the dangerous means of self-description). 1999    Amer. Rec. Guide 		(Nexis)	 1 Jan. 62  				We are given a foreshadowing of the conductor's tendency to over-characterize.   over-cherish  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1706    J. Evelyn Hist. Relig. 		(1850)	 I. iii. 231  				Endeavour that we do not over-cherish their emotions and solicitudes. 1987    C. Coe I look Divine 		(1989)	 13  				You may have noticed that this is often true of men over-cherished in childhood.   over-chill  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1664    J. Evelyn Kalendarium Hortense 59 in  Sylva  				Such Seeds as are in peril of being..over chill'd and frozen. 1702    J. Floyer Cold Baths  i. ii. 30  				That Aversion most People retain against Cold Bathing, as if it would overchil them. 2002    Montreal Gaz. 		(Nexis)	 29 June  g4  				Don't overchill rose wine—you'll rob it of its flavours and perfumes.   over-cleave  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1600    R. Surflet tr.  C. Estienne  & J. Liébault Maison Rustique  iii. xii. 447  				Take heede, not to ouercleaue the stockes of your trees. 1998    Homebrew Digest 		(Electronic text)	 No. 2756  				Proteins are needed for head retention and body. Over-cleaving them will result in thin beer with mediocre heading ability.   over-coach  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1901    Westm. Gaz. 12 Aug. 2/1  				You contended..that public schoolboys were over-coached in batting? 1983    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 10 Jan.  c9/1  				Coaches and players on opposing teams must wonder if the Knicks..are being overcoached.   over-commend  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1612    J. Webster White Divel sig. Kv  				To reprehend Princes is dangerous: and to ouer-commend some of them is palpable lying. 1670    Earl of Clarendon Ess. in  Tracts 		(1727)	 113  				If our credit be so well built, so firm, that it is not easy to be shaken by calumny and insinuation, it then over-commends us..to those upon whom we depend, till they grow jealous. 1908    Internat. Studio July p. xxiv–xxvi, in  F. A. Bedford Frank W. Benson 		(1994)	 129  				Securing his results with a freedom of touch, a healthiness of method that cannot be over-commended.   over-commit  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1919    G. G. Smith Ben Jonson iv. 104  				Jonson gets into difficulties by over-committing himself at the outset to the mood of Asper. 1943    Far Eastern Surv. 12 228/1  				Manpower..was a lively issue—anti-Government parties claiming that the Government had overcommitted itself in this respect. 2002    Daily Tel. 21 Jan. 11  				Many MPs claim that Rudolf Scharping, the defence minister, over-committed Germany too early.   over-complicate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1921    Amer. Econ. Rev. 11 52  				The situation has been overcomplicated by the injection of a set of business motives and practices. 2000    PrintWeek 25 Feb. 30/3  				We tend to over-complicate everything, it's common for people in the industry to say ‘it depends’.   over-concentrate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1874    Blackwood's Edinb. Mag. Sept. 279/1  				If he finds himself peppered all over, his attention is not over-concentrated. 1990    R. Pethybridge One Step Backwards, Two Steps Forward iii. 114  				Subsequent non-Russian scholars have tended to over-concentrate on the workings of Pomgol and its guberniia equivalents.   over-condense  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877    Spectator 19 May 625/1  				An over-condensed, and we are bound to add, unusually unreadable pamphlet. 1995    16th Cent. Jrnl. 26 381  				The entries are made in plain English without being overcondensed or encrypted. ΚΠ 1638    W. Chillingworth Relig. Protestants  i. v. §20. 259  				Heate of disputation against the Donatists, and a desire to over-confute them.   over-control  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1925    W. J. Viljoen in  W. H. Dawson S. Afr. vii. 138  				If there is one thing from which education is suffering in South Africa it is ‘overitis’. We are over-administered, over-controlled, over-legislated, overregulated, and certainly over-examined. 1996    China Post 		(Taipei, Taiwan)	 1 May 4/5  				They could try to over-control the political side of the transition. ΚΠ 1605    J. Sylvester Sonnets upon Miraculous Peace in  tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. 598  				One ouer-Creeds, another Creeds too-short.   over-cull  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1592    T. Nashe Strange Newes sig. G4v  				I doe not ouercull my owne workes. 1998    Newcastle 		(Austral.)	 Herald 		(Nexis)	 17 June 13  				They are professional fishers and would not overcull the stock.   over-cultivate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1808    H. More Cœlebs in Search of Wife I. xxi. 318  				Such a fear of over-cultivating learning, that [etc.]. 1899    Science 8 Sept. 324/2  				Indeed, as compared with other fields, we are tempted to say that this has been over-cultivated. 1997    Europe-Asia Stud. 49 653  				Those leaders who overcultivate nationalism, respond to popular sentiments against Russia.   over-damn  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1900    Westm. Gaz. 13 Sept. 3/1  				It is not that she actually over-praises or over-damns, but she is apt to give to the ‘subject’ up in front of her for the moment an importance which that subject cannot justly claim. 2002    Rep. on Business Mag. 		(Electronic ed.)	 31 May  				If the New Economy was overhyped, it's true too that Cassidy is overdamning.   over-decorate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1865    E. W. Godwin Handbk. Floral Decoration for Churches 8  				If there is a reredos great care should be taken not to over-decorate it. 1988    F. Spalding Stevie Smith xvi  				Her liking for simplicity, her refusal to overdecorate her themes, is only one aspect of her poetics.   over-deflate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1950    Jrnl. Royal Statist. Soc. A. 113 4  				In the early 1920s we over-deflated because bankers were able to think only in terms of the pre-1913 Gold Standard. 1989    Rev. Econ. & Statistics 71 545/2  				The author is sympathetic to the argument that construction output has been overdeflated.   over-digest  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1707    J. Floyer Physician's Pulse-watch 151  				It over-digests and rarifies the Blood and Spirits. 1975    Speculum 50 490  				While Guillou overdigests Byzantium, Dominique Sourdel is agreeably profuse about the Islamic world.   over-dilute  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1938    Times 6 Apr. 8/4  				Shop stewards are convinced that the engineering trade..is being over-diluted. 1997    Washington Post 		(Nexis)	 22 July  do1  				She was told by the pharmacist that the syrup had been overdiluted by a pharmacy technician.   over-discipline  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1902    Westm. Gaz. 17 Oct. 8/2  				Tommy Atkins is over-disciplined, according to the General, and the infantry he found to be more formidable than the cavalry. 1963    Marriage & Family Living 25 187/1  				The wife may feel that the husband is far too strict and that he over-disciplines the children.   over-discount  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1900    Westm. Gaz. 5 Mar. 12/1  				The possibilities of an unfavourable New York Bank statement this week were over-discounted. 1991    Soviet Stud. 43 608  				If..its quantitative series..modestly over-discount hidden inflation, then the Soviet economy..has nonetheless underperformed the West on most key indicators.   over-doctrinize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1893    B. Carpenter in  Bible Soc. Rec. 		(N.Y.)	 July 99  				The moment you over-doctrinize your religion it tends to become mechanical. ΚΠ 1682    H. More Annot. Lux Orientalis 29 in  Two Choice & Useful Treat.  				The memory whereof, if we were capable of it, would..overdoze us and make us half moped to the present Scene of things.   over-dramatize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1896    K. P. Wormeley tr.  H. de Balzac Great Man of Provinces in Paris xvi. 266  				The modern novel, where everything is presented in scenes and images, and which has been over-dramatized by Walter Scott. 1955    S. Spender Making of Poem iv. 63  				Perhaps I over-dramatize the affair. 1993    Atlantic Oct. 68/1  				When some feminists overdramatize minor acts of sexual misconduct..it is sometimes hard to blame them. ΚΠ a1300						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Caius)	 38  				Moni..beod..ouer swide o-uer dreð [for ouer dred]. leste hare heaued ake. a1400						 (c1303)						    R. Mannyng Handlyng Synne 		(Harl.)	 5166  				Holde þe euene hem betwene Nat ouer-drede ne ouer-wene. ΚΠ 1597    J. Payne Royall Exchange 31  				The multitude of there worcks over dulleth and burdeneth.   over-edit  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1860    Sat. Rev. 19 May 649/2  				The American practice of over-editing books, and introducing to the reader every person named. 1926    Mod. Lang. Notes 41 516  				Immensee..has been overread in the American college not merely because it has been over-edited. 1993    Amer. Antiq. 58 594/1  				It is to Webster's credit that chapters were not overedited to present one coherent picture.   over-elaborate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1899    Publ. Amer. Econ. Assoc. No. 2. 6  				The tabulations are in some cases omitted, in some defective, and in some over-elaborated. 1950    Sport 22 Sept. 15/4  				Teams which over-elaborate and fiddle to no purpose are not playing football. 1984    N. A. Cookson Romano-Brit. Mosaics 		(BNC)	 21  				In other instances one finds a tendency to over elaborate, and a heaviness of design..is the result.   over-emphasize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1875    N. Amer. Rev. Jan. 213  				We think the author has rather over-emphasized his irony and his acerbity. 1905    Outlook 7 Oct. 485/1  				He over-emphasises when he suggests that Hungary is a solid State and Austria but a bundle of provinces. 1968    H. Harris Nucleus & Cytoplasm i. 12  				It cannot be over-emphasized that actinomycin D is an extremely toxic compound.   over-engage  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1680    S. Charnock Several Disc. Existence of God 		(1682)	 486  				He never over-engageth himself above his Ability. 1883    G. H. Boker Leonor de Guzman  v. iv. 337  				O watchful Heaven, if my poor destiny Have o'er engaged the service of thy thoughts, Grant me my prayer! 1980    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 21 Sept.  xi. 22/2  				Sometimes children overengage in highly organized and structured activities just to please their parents and gain their acceptance.   over-enjoy  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1842    H. E. Manning Serm. xix. 283  				They live alone with Him,..willing and glad to lack what others over-enjoy. 2002    Sunday News 		(Lancaster, Pennsylvania)	 		(Nexis)	 25 Aug.  p1  				It truly doesn't make sense to overenjoy the pleasures of eating.   over-enrich  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1852    J. S. Mill Princ. Polit. Econ. 		(ed. 3)	 I.  ii. ii. 276  				Wealth which could no longer be employed in over-enriching a few. 1980    M. Shoard Theft of Countryside  vi. xxii. 251  				The water in the broads and rivers has become over-enriched by nutrients.   over-exact  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-exacted. 1957    Speculum 32 767  				By which it might be determined whether the collectors had raised the amount they were required to and whether they had over-exacted.   over-exaggerate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1900    Westm. Gaz. 23 Mar. 2/2  				To have suspended them one by one would have over-exaggerated the situation. 1928    Mod. Lang. Notes 43 400  				Mr. Caskey in his study has done well not to over-exaggerate the virtues of his subject. 1984    S. Koss in  Listener 14 June 15/3  				Politicians..who are saying that the lack of these facilities work [sic] to the inevitable disadvantage of the Labour Party, I think are over-exaggerating the advantages to be obtained.   over-exalt  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1600    R. Hooker Learned Serm. Pride 		(1612)	 3  				The feareful estate of iniquity over exalted. 1931    Econ. Jrnl. 41 404  				Mr. Keynes thus tends to over-exalt the rate of interest at the expense of K.   over-expect  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  iii. xxii. 213  				Deceive not thyself by overexpecting happinesse in the married estate. 1960    C. M. Solley  & G. Murphy Devel. Perceptual World viii. 164  				It was anticipated that the subjects would come to overexpect the rewarded profile in the first experiment and the ‘neutral’ profile in the second experiment.   over-explain  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1828    E. Bulwer-Lytton Pelham 		(ed. 2)	 I. xxxvii. 322  				My uncle had this great virtue of an expositor, that he never over-explained. 1911    Philos. Rev. 20 576  				There has been a tendency to overexplain unjustifiably the facts and processes of development on account of the real scarcity of significant facts. 2002    Glamour July 32/1  				Trying to over-explain may anger your colleague. If they confront you, admit you were wrong and promise it won't happen again.   over-fag  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   now rareΚΠ 1808    Sketches of Character I. x. 244  				He had taken care not to over-fag himself, and when he came to the bottom, could address you with the utmost calmness. 1842    G. Barmby Promethean Mar. 54/1  				To prevent the rich from overworking the poor, the master from overfagging the man. 1905    T. Sanderson Let. 2 May in  K. Neilson Brit. & Last Tsar 		(1995)	  i. i. 21  				Do not over-fag yourself in the quest for information. ΚΠ 1635    Bp. of Peterborough in  Buccleuch MSS 		(Hist. MSS Comm.)	 		(1899)	 I. 275  				Your Lordship..might well judge me otherwise, if I should over-fancy that way.   over-fatten  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1829    J. Bentham Justice & Codification Petitions  iii. 76  				Some judges..sit at ease, other judges overwork and overfatten themselves. 1988    Newsday 		(N.Y.)	 		(Nexis)	 6 Apr. 14  				The federal beef grading system that encourages producers to overfatten their cattle.   over-fee  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-blame,..-fee. 1998    Fort Worth 		(Texas)	 Star-Telegram 		(Nexis)	 15 July (Metro section) 3  				We're not wanting to overfee people, we're just wanting to be equitable.   over-feel  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1648    Bp. J. Hall Select Thoughts 63  				Nor yet so tender that we shuld overfeel it. 1979    I. Howe  & K. Libo How we Lived vi. 261  				I never wanted to overdress, overfeel or overact. I just wanted to be the real thing, so to speak.   over-fix  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1694    W. Westmacott Θεολοβοτονολογια 16  				Food..may beget unnatural heats, even to the calcining and overfixing the balsamical and nutritive juices. 1966    J. R. Baker Cytol. Technique 		(ed. 5)	 vi. 168  				The cells lying on the surface..are ‘overfixed’ by the osmium.   over-flatten  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-flatten. 1986    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 27 Sept.  e14  				It is better to overflatten it slightly so when it dries out a bit indoors it will be just right. 1992    Yoga Jrnl. Jan. 36/3  				Those who have overflattened the lumbar spine.   over-flog  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1823    J. F. Cooper Pioneers II. xvi. 231  				They'll mulct me of my Spaniards, all the same as if I'd overflogged the lubber. 1850    W. M. Thackeray Pendennis 		(1885)	 II. 11  				Endeavouring to enlist him in quarrels..for overflogging his son. 1992    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 57 713/2  				Many fellow writers think village themes have been ‘over-flogged’ by the first generation of Nigerian novelists.   over-force  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1859    A. Watson Amer. Home Garden in  Sci. Amer. 30 Apr. 286/1  				Nursery plants, if they have been over-forced or transplanted with the leaf. 1943    Polit. Sci. Q. 58 21  				The question need not be over-forced. The choice is not necessarily between absolutes—everything or nothing.   over-furnish  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1697    J. S. Innocent Epicure 9  				When, though unask'd, th' eventwill easily show Your willing Chap will over-furnish you. 1946    E. Linklater Private Angels 		(1958)	 51  				It is possible to over-furnish either a room or your life. 1978    M. Kenyon Deep Pocket iii. 32  				The sitting-room..was over-furnished with an accumulation of..bits and pieces.   over-gamble  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1898    Daily News 22 Apr. 7/3  				I think it is good enough, but I say—don't go and over-gamble the shares. 1997    Newsday 		(N.Y.)	 		(Nexis)	 23 July  ii. b65  				Fitz is one of those shrinks with a number of problems. He overeats, overdrinks, oversmokes, overgambles.   over-goad  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1853    C. Dickens Bleak House xvi. 157  				The blinded oxen, over-goaded, over-driven, never guided, run into wrong places and are beaten out. 1927    T. H. Dickinson Outl. Contemp. Drama ix. 137  				Even the best works of French stage art during the contemporary period either lack imagination or overgoad the imagination and weary it. ΚΠ 1619    F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher King & No King  i. sig. B1  				You thinke to ouer-grace mee with The marriage of your Sister. 1864    Webster's Amer. Dict. Eng. Lang. (citing Beaumont & Fletcher)  				Overgrace, to honor above measure. [Also in later dictionaries.]]			   over-grasp  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1613    R. Dallington Aphorismes Ciuill & Militarie  v. i. 292  				For to ouer-graspe straineth and weakeneth the sinewes, and forceth the hand to let fall what before it held fast. 1695    J. Collier Misc. upon Moral Subj. 99  				Confidence is apt to expose it self; to over-grasp Business; to talk without thinking. 1999    Amer. Polit. Sci. Rev. 93 626/2  				People tend to overgrasp for these scarce resources in order to be free from a terrifying dependence on fate.   over-gratify  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1755    Man No. 10. 4  				The drunkard, who seeks his pleasure in drink, over-gratifies his appetite. 1963    Jrnl. Health & Human Behavior 4 288/1  				Rather than being deprived of affection, she was almost overgratified.   over-gun  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1894    C. N. Robinson Brit. Fleet 229  				The prevailing tendency to ‘over-gun’ our ships seriously affected their efficiency. 1999    Re: on High Capacity Mags in  misc.survivalism 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 22 Mar.  				The Europeans do seem to seem [sic] obsessed with not ‘overgunning’ themselves though.   over-handicap  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-handicapped. 1994    Re: Would you support this Organization? in  bit.listserv.autism 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 17 Apr.  				Psychoanalysts are using an approach..that is over-handicapping autistic people.   over-harass  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1842    E. S. Wortley Maiden of Moscow 112  				When toiled their brawnier comrades on, These sank, o'erharassed and undone. 1998    Re: New Hobby…Help Needed in  rec.aquaria.misc 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 23 Apr.  				Get 1 male to 3 females, as the males can tend to overharass females if the ratio is in their favor.   over-hate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1597    J. Lyly Woman in Moone  iii. ii  				Come not out, least you seeming Iealious make her ouer hate you. 1995    Re: Christina to Ed, Part II in  WCENTER 		(Electronic mailing list)	 11 Apr.  				Writers who..either overvalue and overlove what they write, or overhate it and overly undervalue it.   over-help  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877    C. M. Yonge Womankind 		(ed. 2)	 xii. 87  				Allotment of districts by the clergyman is requisite, to prevent some families from being overhelped. 1989    Mind 98 461  				Rewards (why altruism spreads). 1. A helps B. 2. B helps (or overhelps) A.   over-honour  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1637    Bp. J. Hall Serm. Excester 70 in  Remedy Prophanenesse  				The other extreme is of them, who do so over-honour the dead, that they abridge some parts of them of a due sepelition. 1836    T. Doubleday Caius Marius  ii. iii. 28  				Not daring To think I am o'er-honour'd, or that Rome, Who warreth with the proud, could flatter Marius. 1992    M. Riva Marlene Dietrich 218  				The Belle Aurore's ‘little girls' room’ was really over-honored by Dietrich's presence.   over-horse  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1813    Duke of Wellington Dispatches 		(1838)	 X. 77  				Great care must be taken..not to overhorse any [regiments]. Too many horses are worse than too few. 1996    Albuquerque 		(New Mexico)	 Jrnl. 		(Nexis)	 17 Oct. 5  				She has felt frustration when a parent overhorses a child—the animal is too hot or too young for the handler.   over-humanize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1900    Westm. Gaz. 12 Mar. 3/1  				Perhaps he somewhat over-humanized the part, but at any rate he left a strong impression of a powerful, manly, brave human being. 1934    M. Sherwood Undercurrents of Infl. Eng. Romantic Poetry vi. 251  				Ops, the mother of the gods,..is overhumanized into nothingness.   over-hurry  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1753    S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison VI. lii. 321  				My cousin, her spirits over-hurried, was ready to faint in her grandmother's arms. 1808    S. T. Coleridge Let. to F. Jeffrey in  Lett. 		(1895)	 536  				An honest gentleman..having over-hurried the business through overweening of my simplicity and carelessness. 1992    Summary of World Broadcasts Pt. 1: Former U.S.S.R. 		(B.B.C.)	 		(Nexis)	 1 Aug. SU/1448/A1/1  				Employees of the security service..over-hurried him and the opportunity to change clothes for the journey was given only after persistent demands.   over-import  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1866    Galaxy 15 Nov. 713  				It has been stated that our woolen mills have been over-producing. The truth is, the nation has been over-importing. 1952    Internat. Affairs 28 327  				In the United Kingdom we also have been over-importing in 1951.   over-ink  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1927    Observer 12 June 9  				The literary man..is apt to over-ink his pictures of contemporary morals. 2002    Printing World 		(Nexis)	 2 Dec. 23  				His argument was that pages are being overinked and then varnished.   over-instruct  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1827    J. F. Cooper Prairie I. xii. 176  				Here was I doing well, only a little out of sorts with over instructing the young. 1933    G. A. Plimpton Educ. of Shakespeare ii. 23  				His book is called the Instruction of a christen woman, and his fear lest the woman be overinstructed is obvious.   over-interpret  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1863    Spectator 21 Nov. 2772/2  				One is always in danger of over-interpreting the drift of the aggregate. 1939    T. S. Eliot Family Reunion  ii. i. 77  				You overinterpret. I am sure that your mother always loved him; There was never the slightest suspicion of scandal. 1989    Brit. Med. Jrnl. 10 June 1573/1  				Sometimes an anxious mother perceives illness that is not there or overinterprets the periodic breathing and normal movements of a healthy baby.   over-invest  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1865    Jrnl. Statist. Soc. 28 543  				This country exceeded its means, over-invested, or rather entangled too large an amount of capital in inchoate enterprises out of its reach. 1990    J. Bradshaw Homecoming i. 13  				One..trusts in a gullible and naive way, clinging to others and overinvesting esteem in them.   over-involve  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1939    Ecology 20 420  				Few of the speakers became over-involved in terminology. 1997    A. Fenigstein in  M. McCallum  & W. E. Piper Psychol. Mindedness v. 124  				By heightening the salience and subjective importance of the self, and overinvolving the self in the social inference process. ΚΠ 1599    E. Sandys Europæ Speculum 		(1632)	 93  				So huge a multitude of..works as in this over~ranke age mens finger over-itching have produced. ΚΠ 1865    C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend II.  iv. xvii. 302  				Having over-jobbed his jobberies as legislator deputed to the Universe by the pure electors of Pocket Breeches.   over-laud  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1833    E. Bulwer-Lytton Godolphin I. xxv. 302  				You think the world does not overlaud Lady Erpingham. 1928    Geogr. Jrnl. 71 199  				Mr. Chatterton continually commits the fault of over-lauding his hero, while labelling all Smith's associates as cowards, drones, and rabble of the worst type.   over-linger  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  iv. i. 242  				He loves not to over-linger any in an afflicting hope, but speedily dispatcheth the fears or desires of his expecting Clients. 2002    www.grandiose.com 28 Oct. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				One only warns one's readers not to overlinger upon the photoengravure of young Penelope Windsor-Smythe.   over-list  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1665    in  J. H. Trumbull Public Rec. Colony of Connecticut 		(1852)	 II. 23  				Mr. Edward Palmes appeales to this Court..for being ouerlisted by James Rogers and Cary Latham. 1995    R. Dingwall  & T. Durkin in  A. A. S. Zuckerman  & R. Cranston Reform of Civil Procedure 375  				In order to compensate for door-of-the-court settlements, courts overlist to avoid judicial downtime. ΚΠ 1613    S. Purchas Pilgrimage 187  				But I..feare to over lode or over loath the Reader.   over-magnify  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1646    Sir T. Browne Pseudodoxia Epidemica 28  				The Chymistes..overmagnifying their  preparations.       View more context for this quotation 1984    Jrnl. Higher Educ. 55 421  				Burke is inclined to overmagnify the significance and originality of his own claims to truth. ΚΠ 1686    R. Plot Nat. Hist. Staffs. 345  				There is little danger of overmarling such sorts of lands.   over-meddle  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1885    Cassell's Encycl. Dict. V.  i  				Overmeddle. 1994    Hartford 		(Connecticut)	 Courant 		(Nexis)	 12 June  e1  				He never did settle on a GM [sc. general manager] he could trust. So he over-meddled.   over-mix  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1630    J. Taylor Kicksey Winsey in  All Workes 41  				So may a Serieant haue some honest tricks, If too much knauery doth not ouermix. 1697    T. Creech tr.  Manilius Five Bks.  iv. 22  				Little Pleasures over-mixt with Woe. 1999    BBC Good Food July 41  				Do not overmix or the muffins will be tough.   over-moisten  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §422  				It will over-Moisten the Roots, so as the Wormes will eate them. 1891    W. Falconer Mushrooms viii. 71  				The greatest vigilance should be observed to guard against overmoistening the manure. 2002    Chicago Tribune 		(Nexis)	 18 Apr. 1 c  				Add water until the bedding is as moist as a wrung-out sponge. (Be careful not to overmoisten!).   over-mortgage  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1861    W. M. Thackeray Adventures of Philip xii, in  Cornhill Mag. May 579  				[He]..was aquainted with a thousand queer things..whose estates were over-mortgaged; who was over-building himself, [etc.]. 1891    19th Cent. Feb. 		(title)	  				Overmortgaging the land. 1990    Ethics 100 551  				I have..acted in reliance upon that expectation, hopelessly overmortgaging my house against the ‘security’ of that expectation.   over-multiply  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1830    R. H. Dana Poems & Prose Writings II. 355  				Circumstances, however well fitted to move us when taken singly, by being over-multiplied lose their power. 1845    Littell's Living Age 15 Nov. 339/2  				We are of opinion, that such lines cannot well be over multiplied. 1957    World Politics 9 508  				Any larger odd number overmultiplies relationships, and invites an attempt at world conquest.   over-nourish  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1661    R. Lovell Πανζωορυκτολογια, sive Panzoologicomineralogia sig. c3v  				Neither over-nourishing or extenuating the body, but preserving it in such state as before. 1900    J. K. Jerome Three Men on Bummel xiii. 293  				The savage..we never need fear his dying out. On the other hand, it seems unwise to overnourish him. 1992    C. Shields Republic of Love 		(1993)	 xxxv. 349  				His long peaceful marriage had somehow overnourished him.   over-nurse  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1731    E. Thomas Pylades & Corinna p. v  				[She] being an only child was over Nursed. 1857    T. Martin Aladdin  i. i. 29  				Thou Shouldst, like a lap-dog over-nursed and cloy'd, Tremble with mere distrust when I but stroke thee. 1990    Nursing 8–21 Feb. 10/1  				Nurses should avoid taking over all the patient's choices and decisions—overnursing her.   over-objectify  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1890    Athenæum 12 Apr. 462  				Mr. Spencer's attempt to ‘over-objectify’ logic. 1966    MLN 81 550  				Pointing is to encapsule something: strength, mind, life. It is to overobjectify, to overformalize.   over-oblige  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1635    J. Reynolds Triumphs Gods Revenge 		(new ed.)	  v. 176  				My duety over obliging mee to esteeme my Mothers requests as commands, I therefore adventure thee this Letter. 1658    F. Osborne Advice to Son in  Wks. 		(1673)	 80  				If it be dangerous to over-oblige a King, it is mortal in relation to a Free-State. 1922    H. Granville-Barker in  Observer 1 Jan. in  S. Wells Shakespeare in Theatre 		(1997)	 191  				Why..let one pair of cross-fastened yellow stockings (Shakespeare asked no more, for all that Mr. Duncan Grant so over-obliged him!) lure you into those skipping atrocities?   over-organize  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1896    Westm. Gaz. 12 Oct. 3/1  				He..perhaps over-organized the new diocese. But he was an ideal bishop. 1991    Sociol. of Educ. 64 209/2  				Teachers have been accused of overorganizing children's lives.   over-pack  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1831    Mrs. Davy in  J. G. Lockhart Mem. Life Scott 		(1839)	 X. 137  				Just..like a trunk that you are trying to over-pack, but it won't do, the things start out in your face. 1995    Mixmag May 5/3  				We never over-pack our nights, one reason is because in London..if you get caught over the top once you get fined and if caught twice you lose your licence.   over-pamper  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1633    Bp. J. Hall Occas. Medit. 		(ed. 3)	 §cviii  				Who would over-pamper a body for the wormes? 1883    H. C. Merivale Rorke's Drift in  White Pilgrim 191  				O'erpampered with each peaceful glory, Won, step by step, through toil and skill, We traced our fathers' martial story. 1988    Black Amer. Lit. Forum 22 520  				This ‘horseman’..was over-pampered with things of pleasure on the eve of his suicide. ΚΠ 1879    G. Campbell White & Black in U.S. 29  				American women—those who are not accustomed to spend money in an ostentatious way in Europe, and to over-dress and over-peacock there.   over-pepper  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1655    T. Moffett  & C. Bennet Healths Improvem. v. 35  				All things by miscookery over-peppered. 1779    E. Wolff En Dansk og Engelsk Ord-bog at Forpepperer  				To overpepper, pepper too much, embitter. 1991    D. V. Coers John Steinbeck as Propagandist iv. 88  				Restaurant cooks oversalt and overpepper the food they serve to the invaders.   over-pet  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1894    W. H. Hunt in  Daily News 11 June 8/2  				The rage for over-petting the workman in this day. 1928    M. B. Sayles Probl. Child at Home  i. ii. 25  				Children who are thus indulged, over-praised and overpetted, who receive the continuous, concentrated attention of the adults who surround them. ΚΠ 1887    Pall Mall Gaz. 26 Dec. 2/1  				He made his first mistake in overfilling his pit. He made his second in over-plumming his Christmas pudding.   over-point  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877    E. FitzGerald Lett. 		(1889)	 I. 407  				It is only eighty 12mo. pages, and about twenty too long, and the rest over-pointed. 1977    Gramophone Dec. 1067/3  				Adopting too slow a tempo and over-pointing phrases whose true sense of mysterious restlessness emerges only if played exactly as marked.   over-polish  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1725    A. Blackwall Sacred Classics I.  i. ii. 69  				A judicious ear that wou'd be offended with a style over-polish'd. 1999    R. Adler Gone 94  				Writers, with even the slightest streak of perfectionism, polished and polished, and, often, wrecked good pieces by overpolishing them.   over-possess  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1744    R. Mead Disc. Plague 		(ed. 9)	 Pref. p. xl  				Wrong Notions..may sometimes over-possess their minds. 1995    Revelations of Awareness 		(Cosmic Awareness Communications)	 No. 2  				No entity wants to be overpossessed by a spouse, by a chosen loved one. ΚΠ a1610    J. Healey tr.  Theophrastus Characters 		(1636)	 3  				Therefore not to over-preface to that which must be sayd; I will begin with those that delight in cavilling.   over-promise  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1677    R. Gilpin Dæmonol. Sacra 		(1867)	 3  				They cannot but check themselves, for over-promising themselves in their adventures, with that of Zophar, ‘Vain man would be wise.’ 1895    Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 6 87  				It is this weakness on the part of average mankind which tempts the ordinary leader to over-promise for the measures he is advocating. 1989    Marketing Week 17 Mar. 15/2  				It hasn't overpromised like some of the high street retailers and the economy is moving in its favour.   over-prove  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1680    W. Allen Perswasive to Peace & Unity 		(ed. 2)	 46  				I might both amplifie, and exemplifie this, and over-prove it, in shewing how [etc.]. 1880    Spectator 25 Dec. 1655/2  				Men of late have overproved everything so much. 1991    W. Sheed Baseball & Lesser Sports 123  				Robinson proved, over-proved, under unrepeatable pressure, that he could break your concentration before you could break his.   over-provoke  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1631    Bp. J. Hall Occas. Medit. 		(ed. 2)	 		(2nd state)	 §cxxxvi  				It grieves him to bee over-provoked to our punishment. 1704    J. Swift Tale of Tub iv  				The other could not forbear, being over-provoked at the affected seriousness of Peter's countenance. 2002    Waterfront News 		(Florida)	 Oct. 10/1  				Neither of them care to over-provoke waterfront dwellers, who sometimes assert their private property rights belligerently.   over-puff  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1823    J. Jekyll Let. 12 Dec. 		(1894)	 138  				The boys..amuse one with their theatrical accounts of Kean and Young and the extraordinary acting of a little girl named Fisher. But the new Juliet is over puffed, I find. 1939    W. Scott Jrnl. 		(1950)	 466  				I must take care he does not in civility over-puff my little assemblage of curiosities.   over-race  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1896    Westm. Gaz. 15 Sept. 7/2  				Owners are now encouraged to ruinously over-race their three-year-olds. 2000    Canberra Sunday Times 11 June 81/4  				He was concerned that Vemante tends to over-race and might not stay longer trips. ΚΠ 1889    A. T. Pask Eyes of Thames 207  				Americans don't over-rapturize much now-a-days.   over-regulate  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1881    Spectator 1 Jan. 11/1  				Her poems..reflect too much the monotonous cadences of her own musical but over-regulated voice. 1979    Jrnl. Southern Afr. Stud. 6 54  				Perhaps the Council had learnt a lesson about attempting to over-regulate the life and movements of African women.   over-rehearse  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1976    Gramophone May 1732/1  				Most concerts are under-rehearsed and rely too much on the inspiration of the moment, or are over-rehearsed and so dead. 1999    B. G. Shapiro Reinventing Drama 190  				It is just as important for actors not to overrehearse or rehearse too close to a performance.   over-relax  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1751    T. Stack tr.  R. Mead Med. Precepts ii. 70  				That very warmth..becoming prejudicial, by over-relaxing the fibres. 1984    O. Keepnews Bill Evans Sessions in  View Within 		(1988)	  vi. 175  				I..feared that a steady dose of slower tempos might perhaps overrelax the group to the point of lethargy.   over-represent  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1849    Amer. Whig Rev. Mar. 290/2  				The next year giving..to the one that was over-represented a number less. 1881    Jrnl. Statist. Soc. 44 146  				Both the dangers above referred to, viz., (1) of the majority in the constituencies being misrepresented in the assembly, and (2) of its being over-represented there. 1987    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 52 393  				Our subsample overrepresents those with children.   over-restore  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1878    G. G. Scott Lect. Mediæval Archit. 		(1879)	 I. 322  				The transepts, now sadly over-restored, belong to the latter half of the thirteenth century. 1995    J. M. Lindgren Preserving Hist. New Eng. vii. 138  				Not only had he been criticized for overrestoring such seventeenth-century dwellings as the Revere and Nurse houses, but [etc.].   over-rev  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1928    ‘N. Shute’ So Disdained i. 58  				His pulse seemed to be over-revving badly and he was very hot. 1994    New Scientist 19 Feb. 40/1  				When wheels spin as the train struggles to restart on a slippery track, motors can overrev and burn out.   over-reward  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1656    Ld. Orrery Parthenissa V.  v. ii. 111  				Onely to acquaint me your mercy is, which has in that one performance so over rewarded the duty of the service I have pay'd you. 1854    F. T. Palgrave Birth of Art in  Idyls & Songs 49  				I count my aim accomplish'd—the reward That o'er-rewards the task. 1949    M. Mead Male & Female iv. 85  				In a society that has so over-rewarded male positions.   over-sauce  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1682    G. Wheler Journey into Greece  iv. 312  				We had like to have over-sawc'd it [sc. the Supper] with Wine. 1998    Florida Times-Union 		(Electronic ed.)	 31 July  				The usual American tendency to oversauce and overcheese anything that has an Italian-sounding ‘ini’ suffix.   over-scare  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1854    L. Lloyd Scand. Adv. I. 275  				Music..being considered as apt to overscare wild beasts. 2000    South Bend 		(Indiana)	 Tribune 		(Nexis)	 2 June  d4  				It overscared her and for that I was sorry and apologized.   over-scent  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1855    Harper's Mag. Mar. 563/1  				Perhaps there is not a more offensive feature of dandyism than over-scenting with high-flavored sweets. 1883    R. Broughton Belinda I.  i. viii. 143  				All the enormous nosegays with which her room is over-filled and over-scented. 1990    Boston Globe 		(Nexis)	 28 Oct.  a9  				There are sweet moments not overscented with nostalgia, and some fine acting—not least by Elijah Wood.   over-scrub  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1844    J. T. J. Hewlett Parsons & Widows II. xxvii. 141  				In her zeal for the cleanliness of her pupils, she over-scrubbed herself and them on a damp, cheerless day. The result was a violent cold. 1994    Commercial Appeal 		(Memphis, Tennessee)	 		(Nexis)	 14 June 3 c  				Avoid overscrubbing the skin.   over-season  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1625    J. Fletcher Pilgrim  iv. ii, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 sig. Hhhhh3v/1  				Had I bin over seasond with base anger, And suited all occasions to my mischiefes. 1889    Scribner's Mag. Oct. 497/1  				Praise is the meat he lives on, and the dish cannot be overseasoned. 1990    D. Shekerjian Uncommon Genius  i. p. xxiii  				The strong temptation to overseason the paragraphs with pungent, spicy detail.   over-secrete  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1927    J. B. S. Haldane  & J. S. Huxley Animal Biol. viii. 164  				If the pituitary begins to over-secrete before the epiphyses have been joined by bone to the shafts, the patient becomes a giant. 1996    Proc. National Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 93 8046/1  				This APP was oversecreted from Chinese hamster ovary cells transfected with a full-length APP cDNA.   over-seed  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1615    W. Lawson Country Housewifes Garden 		(1626)	 22  				One could not thriue for the throng of his neighbours..like a Corne-field ouer-seeded, or a towne ouer~peopled. 1954    Bot. Gaz. 115 272/2  				The area was overseeded with a mixture of 6 pounds each of alfalfa and red clover. 1974    Science 10 Mar. 910/3  				The result will be a tendency to ‘overseed’ cold clouds and reduce precipitation.   over-soak  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1640    H. Mill Nights Search xliii. 216  				His brains being over-soak'd, his tongue was oyl'd, And tipt with non-sense. 1794    Philos. Trans. 		(Royal Soc.)	 84 176  				They [sc. the crops] were much hurt by it, and perhaps the more so for having been before oversoaked with snow and wet. 1993    Pittsburgh Post-Gaz. 		(Nexis)	 13 Aug. 3  				If you spray the furniture directly, you might oversoak it.   over-store  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1586    W. Warner Albions Eng.  iii. xv. 60  				When their broodie Race that Isle did ouer-store, Amongst the Islands Hebredes they seeke out dwellings more. a1676    M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind 		(1677)	  ii. ix. 208  				The Ocean it self would have been long since over-stored with Fish. 1998    Re: Fast Food Toys in  alt.dumpster 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 24 Oct.  				It made me a worse packrat, hiding things and overstoring what ought to have been thrown out. ΚΠ c1400						 (?a1387)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Huntington HM 137)	 		(1873)	 C.  vii. 429  				Ich, gloton..ouer-sopede at my soper... More þan my kynde myghte wel defye.   over-sweat  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1860–9    W. M. Holcombe On Treatm., Diet, & Nursing Yellow Fever 18  				Do not overheat and over-sweat your patient, do not overfeed or underfeed him. 1998    Arkansas Democrat-Gaz. 		(Nexis)	 3 July  w3  				There'll be plenty of beat-the-heat treats like cold watermelon and lemonade on hand, too, so don't fret if you oversweat.   over-teach  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1582    J. Yates Castell of Courtesie 47  				Yet some will say, that Fennill is to flatter: They ouer teache, then tongues too much do clatter. 1875    Scribner's Monthly Apr. 771/1  				To encourage curiosity concerning as wide a range of subjects as possible, and not to overteach. 1985    Man 20 352/1  				[This] has perhaps overtaught us to respect the ironic and sometimes grisly reversals of overt intentions. ΚΠ 1631    G. Markham Way to get Wealth 		(1668)	  iii. ii. v. 127  				If you draw a course thred from a Wooll of a fine staple, it will then so much overthick, that you must take away a great part of the substance of your wooll in flocks. 1720    in  T. D'Urfey Wit & Mirth VI. 92  				The Water..over-thicks my Cloth.   over-throng  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1860    P. H. Hayne Avolio 70  				Thy sweet eyes, And happy smiles, and fulness of all light Of genial beauty, overthrong my sight With memories of another. 1918    V. S. Howard tr.  S. Lagerlöft Holy City 19  				When the courts were overthronged with people the huge copper gates closed.   over-till  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1601    P. Holland tr.  Pliny Hist. World I. 555  				Nothing is lesse profitable, and expedient, than to labor a ground exceeding much, and to ouer-til it. 1929    Econ. Geogr. 5 297/2  				Though many fairly fertile spots of the region have scarcely been touched.., accessible areas have been overtilled and overgrazed.   over-vilify  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1651    R. Baxter Plain Script. Proof Infants Church-membership & Baptism 345  				I quickly found too many over~valuing it, and some overvilifying it. 2001    Orlando Sentinel 		(Nexis)	 13 Oct.  e6  				If this type of music is done too often..it can create..a tendency to overvilify our enemies.   over-worry  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1865    C. Dickens Our Mutual Friend II.  iii. xvi. 151  				Saying to himself when he is in danger of being over-worried, ‘I see land at last!’ 1868    Putnam's Mag. Nov. 514/1  				Insanity..is very rarely met with except among those classes who over-work and over-worry their brains. 1999    N.Y. Times 26 Jan.  d7/5  				One doesn't want to overworry women, but it is better to be relaxed.   over-worship  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1635    A. Stafford Femall Glory 		(1860)	 Ep. Ded. 60  				As we cannot over-worship the True Deity, so wee cannot over-praise a true Piety. 1983    Manch. Guardian Weekly 		(Nexis)	 9 Oct. 10  				The Prime Minister tends to be either underestimated or overworshipped.  (ii)   With the past participles of verbs whose other parts appear not to occur with over- at all (cf. sense  2b(b)(iii)).   over-agitated  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1649    Bp. J. Hall Resol. & Decisions  iii. vii. 290  				What is fit to be determined in a business so over-agitated. 1998    Washington Post 		(Nexis)	 29 Dec.  a1  				They feel awake without feeling overagitated.   over-bitten  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1851    J. Ruskin Stones of Venice I. App.  viii. 364  				They [sc. plates]..are over-bitten, they are hastily drawn. 1880    Scribner's Monthly Aug. 587/1  				If the plate is over-bitten, the lines can be made paler with a burnisher. ΚΠ 1561    J. Hollybush tr.  H. Brunschwig Most Excellent Homish Apothecarye f. 21  				It is good for the stomake that is ouerchafed. 1610    R. Tofte Honours Academie 19  				That Plaindor, being ouerchaft with this fierce amorous rage, His lippes vpon the cheekes and mouth, of his faire Saint did gage. ΚΠ 1600    R. Surflet tr.  C. Estienne  & J. Liébault Maison Rustique  vii. xviii. 830  				Nature will not be ouer chased.   over-corned  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1712    J. Addison Spectator No. 317. ⁋4  				Small Beer sour. Beef over-corned. 1876    J. Grant One of Six Hundred x. 90  				She's a blood mare..over-corned a bit. 1953    M. Traynor Eng. Dial. Donegal 204/2  				Over-corned, of a horse: overfed with corn.   over-cumbered  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1565    J. Jewel Def. Apol. Churche Eng. 		(1611)	 620  				To be too careful, and ouercombred about the iudgements of mortal Men. 1849    R. Montgomery Christian Life 102  				The very hairs of men are number'd, Why then be with woes be o'ercumber'd? 1931    R. Tagore Relig. of Man ii. 108  				Some of them may have their æsthetic value to me and others philosophical significance overcumbered by exuberant distraction of legendary myths.   over-delighted  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1613    G. Markham Second Pt. First Bk. Eng. Arcadia 80  				The wondring Sheepheards stand gazing vpon him; and are so ouer-delighted with the excellency of his rare shew, that..they stand, as it were, lost in their wonder. 1802    R. Southey New Lett. 		(1965)	 I. 273  				Nor will you be over-delighted. 1996    Q Jan. 110/3  				Sections of the audience proved sluggish and unimaginative, visibly none too vibed up by the new songs..and over-delighted by anything arpeggiated and in 6/8 time. ΚΠ 1616    G. Markham tr.  C. Estienne et al.  Maison Rustique 		(rev. ed.)	 533  				As a field starueth, if it be not dunged at all, so it burneth if it be ouer-dunged. a1706    J. Evelyn Direct. for Gardiner 		(1932)	 69  				Water over dunged brings a black smutt on orange leaves. ΚΠ 1646    T. Fuller Andronicus  i. xiv. sig. Civ  				The city..was instantly conquered, (whose strength was much overfam'd). ΚΠ 1602    N. Breton Mothers Blessing xliii  				And neuer be with flatterers ouerfawnd.   over-iodized  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   rareΚΠ 1878    W. de W. Abney Treat. Photogr. 		(1881)	 62  				The solution is ‘over-iodized’; that is, it is super-saturated with silver iodide.   over-mucked  v.  Brit.  , U.S.   rareΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-mucked. ΚΠ 1868    Dublin Univ. Mag. 72 127/2  				The travelling histrionics commemorated, or rather over-over-coloured by Crabbe.   over-pained  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1589    R. Greene Menaphon sig. B3  				When thou art ouer-pained with passions. 1925    D. Ross tr.  Aristotle Nicomachean Ethics 		(1998)	  iv. iii. 91  				[The proud man] will be neither over-joyed by good fortune nor over-pained by evil.   over-preoccupied  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1952    Econ. Hist. Rev. 5 54  				Self-interest seemed to demand the increase of a population not over-preoccupied with agricultural pursuits. 1989    Econ. Jrnl. 99 1232  				There is a tendency to be vague, assertive and over-preoccupied with semantics.   over-protracted  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1868    R. Browning Ring & Bk.  ix, in  Poet. Wks. 		(1888–94)	 X. 11  				If petulant remonstrance made appeal, Unseasonable, o'erprotracted. 1998    Evening Standard 		(Nexis)	 2 Oct. 50  				The rudiments of the warfare, with Ku Klux Klannish figures in wizard hats who erupt from billowing sheets, are overprotracted. ΚΠ 1691    J. Dunton Voy. round World III. x. 375  				We were so far from being over-ravish'd with joy at the Sight, that we took it for some inchanted Castle. ΚΠ a1640    J. Ball Answer to Iohn Can 		(1642)	  i. 12  				Metaphoricall speeches must not be over-retched.   over-sated  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1822    P. B. Shelley Cyclops in  Posthumous Poems 		(1824)	 350  				I'm..With the young feast oversated. 1998    Yale Herald 		(Electronic ed.)	 16 Jan.  				By the time we finished the dish we were oversated.   over-settled  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  ii. xxvi. 82  				Be not over-setled in a purpose about things of this nature. 1948    Amer. Polit. Sci. Rev. 42 157  				Later this region was over-estimated and over-settled for agricultural purposes.   over-smitten  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1817    J. Keats Poems 73  				When many lines I'd written, Though with their grace I was not oversmitten, Yet..I thought I'd better [etc.]. 1993    People 		(Electronic ed.)	 15 Feb. 28  				He..discovers that a nurse, lamentably oversmitten with him, has followed him down from Cambridge. ΚΠ 1629    J. Gaule Practique Theories Christs Predict. 153  				That we are either vnacquainted, or ouerstalled with it. ΚΠ 1794    Har'st Rig xlviii. 18  				Frae this they tell, as how the rent O' sic a room was overstent.   over-stowed  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1751    T. Smollett Peregrine Pickle I. ii. 17  				I have heard as how you came by your lame foot, by having your upper-decks overstowed with liquor. 1840    E. A. Poe Tales of Grotesque & Arabesque I. 210  				It was a trifle to a tight sea-boat like myself not overstowed.   over-technicized  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1953    Mind 62 424  				It is a joy to go back to the beginnings of a subject which has since become over-technicised. ΚΠ 1610    P. Holland tr.  W. Camden Brit.  i. 493  				Richard the last Abbot..being ouer-tipled, as it were, with wealth.   over-tutored  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1691    J. Norris Pract. Disc. Divine Subj. To Rdr. sig. A6v  				They suffer in their Morals by being over-tutour'd, as some Men do in their Health by being over-Physick'd. 1879    M. Arnold Pref. to Mixed Ess. in  Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 		(1923)	 33 277  				To feel oneself over-tutored, over-governed, sate upon..by authority. 1927    R. A. Taylor Leonardo  ii. vii. 253  				Children not overtutored are always truly princely in manner.   over-vexed  v.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1656    R. Sanderson 20 Serm. 280  				Ionas was overjoyed when the gourd sprang up, and over-vexed when it withered. a1668    W. Davenant Distresses  iii. i, in  Wks. 		(1673)	 46  				It seems my man is not o'er-vex'd with cares, For I believe he's fast asleep. 1924    D. C. Seitz Joseph Pulitzer xvi. 386  				Over-vexed by the Panama prosecution and the whooping cough, Mr. Pulitzer did not return to America during 1909. ΚΠ 1607    J. Carpenter Plaine Mans Spirituall Plough 198  				Devoured of birds, or over withered with the Sun. 1812    J. Sinclair Acct. Syst. Husb. Scotl. I. 395  				The side next the ground is damaged, and discoloured, the upper side over-withered, and the fine juices of the hay evaporated.  (b)   Forming adjectives. Such adjectives are freely used as plural nouns after the (see the adj. 23).  (i)   With simple adjectives.These appear already in Old English and the cognate languages. In Old English nearly 30 examples are recorded, including over-cold adj., overfat adj., overfull adj., overgreedy adj., over-high adj., overloud adj., over-mickle adj., overmoody adj., over-old adj., over-rank adj., and obsolete oferǣte, oferetol, ofersprecol, oferglenged, ofermōdlīc, etc. In Old English these are treated editorially as true compounds, though in Old English and Middle English over was usually written separately, and its use began to be extended beyond the words handed down from Old English. Since c1500, the tendency has been to treat over as a movable element which can be prefixed at will to any adjective; and in Scottish and northern English dialects, where ower, owre is the regular equivalent of Standard English too, it is always written as a separate word (cf. over adv. 11a). In literary English it is usually hyphenated, except in a small number of combinations of ancient standing and frequent use, which are usually written as single words: e.g. overfond adj., overfull adj., overmuch adj., etc. But even in literary English, over is sometimes treated as a separate word, and the consciousness that it is such is seen in the colloquial strengthened form over and above (see over and above prep. 2).The more important adjectives of this type are treated as main entries: see overabundant adj., overactive adj., over-anxious adj., etc.Cf. also overly adv.   over-abstemious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1677    R. Gilpin Dæmonol. Sacra 		(1867)	 124  				Timothy was so in his great pains and over-abstemious life, to the wasting of his strength. 1905    J. S. Morton Illustr. Hist. Nebraska I. viii. 291/1  				Just the pretentious, windy, verbose, and not over-abstemious politician, between whom and Morton mutual dislike and hostility were inevitable.   over-accurate adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1699    R. Bentley Diss. Epist. Phalaris 		(new ed.)	 240  				Mr. Selden was not over accurate in copying the Inscription. 1896    Mind 5 561  				The chief source of disappointment..is likely to be the inadequate and not over-accurate treatment given to Bacon and Locke. 1970    Math. of Computation 24 124  				We have used over-accurate approximations for the derivatives.   over-ambitious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1655    R. Baron Mirza Argt. sig. A7  				Yet (like most mean men hoisted to extraordinary preferment,) he grew so over ambitious, as to aim at the Crown. 1839    N. P. Willis Bianca Visconti  iii. i. 59  				This o'er-ambitious Sforza Must not be Duke. 1994    Sunday Times 6 Mar.  v. 11/2  				The fear of either laying down rigid tramlines or failing to achieve over-ambitious targets.   over-apprehensive adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1634    W. Tirwhyt tr.  J. L. G. de Balzac Lett. 351  				The roughnesse of the season..makes mee over apprehensive to stirre out of my Chamber. 1838    W. Ware Probus I. 107  				From what I have said, I fear lest you should think me over-apprehensive. 1974    Science 5 July 22/3  				Very often they [sc. parents] seem to have been either simply inexperienced..; or overapprehensive; or overefficient and intrusive.   over-apt adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1586    Sir P. Sidney Arcadia 		(1593)	  iii. 283  				Finding her sonne ouer-apt to lay both condemnation, and execution of sorrow vpon himselfe. 1859    J. S. Knowles Virginius  i. ii. 69  				To thee..that hast neither eye To scan my looks, nor voice to echo me, Nor e'en an o'er-apt ear to catch my words. 2002    Entertainm. Weekly 		(Nexis)	 14 June 90  				The rather overapt comment that a 3-year-old child is ‘childlike’. ΚΠ 1638    tr.  F. Bacon Hist. Life & Death 144  				A Plaine, moderately dry; But yet not over-barren, or Sandy; nor altogether without Trees, and Shade. ΚΠ 1548    N. Udall et al.  tr.  Erasmus Paraphr. Newe Test. I. Pref. 5  				All temporall..rewardes were incomparably ouer basse. a1586    Sir P. Sidney Arcadia 		(1593)	  ii. 222  				Poore Erona to all this obeied, either vehemency of affection making her stoop to so ouerbase a seruitude.   over-bashful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1680    T. Shadwell Woman-captain  iv. 49  				We that come from the Camp are pretty well set, and are seldom over-bashful. 1833    T. S. Fay Crayon Sketches I. 28  				One over-bashful youth is inoculated with a little becoming self-possession. 1910    Cambr. Hist. Eng. Lit. VI. 158  				Ladislaus, the humble husband of the proud Honoria, Caldorio and the over-bashful Hortensio. ΚΠ 1597    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  v. iii. 8  				In the Church of God sometimes it commeth to passe as in ouer battle grounds, the fertile disposition whereof is good.   over-big adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1653    R. Saunders Physiognomie 243  				The head over-big, or little, as also, over-hairy. 1671    J. Sharp Midwives Bk.  vi. iii. 337  				The breasts should be of a moderate size..; it is not necessary to have them over-big. 1711    E. Ward Life Don Quixote  v. xvii. 327  				Tho' the Wound was not o'erbig, It made him bleed like any Pig. 1926    Times 30 July 8/3  				He was not a great believer in over-big concerns.   over-blind adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1450						 (c1412)						    T. Hoccleve De Regimine Principum 		(Harl. 4866)	 		(1897)	 861 (MED)  				Þey þat nat konne lerned be ne taght By swiche ensaumples..Me þinkeþ, certes, ouer blynde been. 1747    P. Francis Hor. Sat.  i. ii. 109  				Th' example's good; then keep it in thy mind, Nor to the fair one's faults be over-blind. 1946    Ld. Elton Imperial Commonw.  viii. i. 338  				A process..of sterilisation, conducted by men who remained overblind to the spiritual and intellectual riches of the East itself. ΘΚΠ the mind > emotion > pleasure > merriment > 			[adjective]		 > excessively over-blitheeOE mad-merry1600 the mind > emotion > pleasure > cheerfulness > 			[adjective]		 > light-hearted > too light-hearted over-blitheeOE eOE    King Ælfred tr.  Gregory Pastoral Care 		(Hatton)	 		(1871)	 lxi. 455  				Oft ða oferbliðan weorðað gedrefde for ungemetlicre onettunga. 1711    J. Greenwood Ess. Pract. Eng. Gram. 196  				Over-blith or (merry).   over-bookish adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1633    J. Ford 'Tis Pitty shee's Whore  ii. sig. E3  				You must forsake this ouer bookish humour. 1997    Scotsman 		(Nexis)	 11 Aug. 13  				This stranger who had a claim upon his mother and a crude desire to toughen up his over-bookish boy.   over-bounteous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1649    J. Milton Εικονοκλαστης xi. 104  				Whether it were his envy, not to be over-bounteous, or that the submissness of our asking stirr'd up in him a certain pleasure of denying. a1874    S. Dobell Balder in  Poet. Wks. 		(1875)	 II. 191  				Surely the Lord is cruel but to me, And over bounteous to the race of men With mercy taken from my single lot.   over-capable adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1593    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie Pref. 16  				Men credulous & ouer capable of such pleasing errors. 2000    Kansas City 		(Missouri)	 Star 		(Nexis)	 17 Sept.  c1  				He's more than capable. In fact, he's overcapable of playing left field.   over-captious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie iv. 24–7  				His commeth to passe nowe and then by reason that men are overcaptious. 1616    T. Scot Philomythie 		(ed. 2)	 sig. B  				To the ouer-wise, ouer-wilfull, ouer-curious, or ouer-captious Readers. 1936    Jrnl. Mod. Hist. 8 99  				Despite these possibly overcaptious remarks concerning the lack of coherent and consistent pattern, the reader will find much useful and illuminating information.   over-careless adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1621    R. Burton Anat. Melancholy  ii. i.  iv. i. 209  				That he be not over-careless or covetous. 1896    Harper's Mag. Jan. 182/1  				He was sometimes loud and hectoring, or over-careless what he said or did. 1934    R. Suckow Folks vi. 584  				It had made him both overcareless and overfastidious about his legal cases, always spending more money than he earned.   over-charitable adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1600    R. Hooker Answere Supplic. W. Travers 		(1612)	 30  				Sith I offended onely through an overcharitable inclination, hee conceaued good hope, when I should see the truth cleered..I would yeeld. 1673    B. Keach War with Devil 154  				That Monster, who did sore rebuke, The over charitable Popish Duke Of Salva. 1978    Classical Philol. 73 365  				B.'s view of the accusers..in these early cases is, rather like that of Tiberius, over-charitable.   over-childish adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-childish. 1957    E. J. Lovell in  C. D. Thorpe et al.  Major Eng. Romantic Poets 141  				The overchildish or over pretty or feminine element in some good Wordsworth and in much poetry up to our date. 1988    Financial Times 		(Nexis)	 8 Mar. 21  				The sometimes over-childish moments of her early trivialities and excesses.   over-circumspect adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1617    S. Hieron Wks. 		(1620)	 I. 16  				In the watching ouer his owne heart & in the pondering his waies no man can be ouer circumspect. 1842    H. E. Manning Serm. xi. 156  				The dreary level of an over-circumspect and self-regarding life. 1941    Monumenta Nipponica 4 191  				Hikoroku was not over-circumspect. ‘There is nothing to fear now that dawn has come,’ he said. ‘Please come in.’   over-clean adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1748    S. Richardson Clarissa V. lviii. 363  				Your riding-dress will do for the first visit. Nor let your boots be over clean. c1806    D. Wordsworth Jrnl. 		(1941)	 I. 327  				Two beds, with not over-clean bedclothes. 1962    Background 6 40  				Gorer's view that early toilet training results in a rigid, overclean, meticulous and dogmatic personality.   over-complimentary adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1851    G. Borrow Lavengro III. xxii. 262  				Really, young man,..you are not over complimentary. 1867    J. S. Mill Exam. Hamilton's Philos. 		(ed. 3)	 p. vii  				Some of the writers are..even over-complimentary. 1954    Mod. Lang. Notes 69 245  				He must have felt that though over-complimentary it was fairer as a judgment on The Chances.   over-concise adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1894    S. A. Brooke Tennyson xi. 396  				It is concise, of course; Tennyson was always concise; but Enoch Arden is not overconcise. 1984    New Phytologist 97 539  				Dale's paper is not open to the charge of being overconcise.   over-conscientious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1835    R. M. Bird Infidel I. xiv. 170  				The worthy and somewhat over-conscientious Bernal Diaz del Castillo has despatched the whole history of the first [individual] in the few vague fragments which we have prefixed to the story. 1995    Times Educ. Suppl. 10 Feb. 96/2  				I think the answer lies partly in the nature of the people who work for LEAs—an overconscientious and guilt-ridden lot we are.   over-conscious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1677    W. Wycherley Plain-dealer  ii. 24  				As an over-conscious Fool at a Play, by endeavouring to shew the Author's want of Wit, exposes his own to more censure. 1851    H. Melville Moby-Dick i. 3  				Whenever I begin to..be over conscious of my lungs. 1990    Hist. Jrnl. 33 1009  				Brissot was always over-conscious of his humble origins.   over-controversial adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1862    H. Sidgwick Let. 28 Jan. in  A. Sidgwick  & E. M. Sidgwick Henry Sidgwick 		(1906)	 74  				It seems smashing, but he loses by being over-controversial. 1996    Re: Re: TSR D&D Religions Blasphemous & Insulting? in  rec.games.frp.dnd 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 25 Aug.  				I'm willing to bet money that they took their best shots at it and it came out as overcontroversial and unplayable.   over-copious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1649    J. Milton Εικονοκλαστης xxviii. 234  				In an argument overcopious rather then barren. 1991    Science 25 Jan. 457/1  				It offered a cure for the fatal disease of over-copious magnetic-monopole production in the early universe.   over-corrupt adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1594    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie 		(1632)	  v. 229  				They taste oftentimes too much of that ouer-corrupt fountaine from which they come. 1996    Moscow News 		(Nexis)	 16 May 19  				He restarted the process of cleaning the Party from overcorrupt and decrepit cadres.   over-courteous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1635    T. Randolph Muses Looking-glasse  ii. i. 16 in  Poems 		(1638)	  				The one [is] Colax, that to seeme over Courteous falls into a servile flattery, the other..is Dyscolus. 1844    C. J. Lever Tom Burke I. xiii. 98  				The matter-of-fact shortness of Miss Bubbleton's not over-courteous manner. 1937    Amer. Antiq. 2 245  				This over-courteous method..results in scientific purpose being supplanted by an emotional purpose.   over-covetous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1481    W. Caxton tr.  Hist. Reynard Fox 		(1970)	 90  				Ouer couetous was neuer good. 1661    Princess Cloria  iii. 315  				Have you got so much already from your King, that you go about now to lose that, and all you have in being over covetous? 1861    A. Trollope Framley Parsonage II. i. 17  				She had ceased to regard such attempts on her money-bags as unmanly or over-covetous. 1990    Independent 		(Nexis)	 21 July (Weekend section) 29  				He was not over-covetous with material possessions, although he would hurl himself into new hobbies with a total disregard for cost.   over-coy adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1604    in  T. Greaves Songes of Sundrie Kindes sig. B3  				Flora sweete wanton bee not ouer coy. 1646    H. Hammond View Exceptions to Visct. Falkland's Disc. Infallibilitie 158  				I shall not be over-coy, nor make much scruple to tell you my opinion of this also. 1986    Los Angeles Times 		(Nexis)	 28 Feb.  vi. 12/1  				It may be Saville's full-throated, overripe direction as much as Welch's sometimes overcoy writing.   over-dainty adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1450    Jacob's Well 		(1900)	 144  				Þe iiij fote brede of wose in þis glotony is for to ete ouyr-deynte metys, for þei schaldo more cost at a mele þan xl men myȝte lyue by. 1836    E. C. Jones Student of Padua  ii. ii. 49  				I, a beggar—A beggar living on the world's opinion!—Should not be over dainty. 1988    N. Baker Mezzanine ix. 78  				The overdainty background coffee cup in the backlit panel gave way to a larger, cozier-looking brown ceramic mug.   over-deep adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1598    J. Dickenson Greene in Conceipt To Rdr. 7  				Iustly fearing the ouer deep & piercing censures of this iudiciall age. 1648    R. Sanderson Serm. II. 228  				It is not any reality in the things themselves so much that troubleth the mind, as our over-deep apprehensions of them. 1978    Industr. & Labor Relations Rev. 31 540  				Most undergraduates would be apt to find the water over-deep, at least in introductory courses.   over-delicious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1483    W. Caxton tr.  J. de Voragine Golden Legende 116/2  				Thyse monckes ben ouer delycious. 1945    in  PS 		(1996)	 29 670/2  				These persons who think that by serving a particularly rich and over-delicious meal, they are doing the Congressman a great favor.   over-dependent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1929    C. B. Zachry Personality Adjustments School Children iv. 184 		(heading)	  				The over-dependent child. 2002    Guardian 8 Jan. (Educ. section) 4/1  				Schoolphobic children were thought to be over-dependent on their mothers, spoilt or just plain awkward.   over-diligent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1600    R. Chambers Palestina 10  				He thoght that hereby hee might..enioy her companie, whome hee so entirely loued without giuing any cause of ielousie to her ouerdiligent keeper. 1711    Ld. Shaftesbury Characteristicks III. Misc.  ii. i. 30  				The very reading of Treatises..of Melancholy has been apt to generate that Passion in the over-diligent and attentive Reader. 1956    Amer. Econ. Rev. 46 497  				So far the courts have avoided both the rocks of ‘per se’ rigidity and the shoals of overdiligent inquiry.   over-distant adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1639    T. Fuller Hist. Holy Warre  v. xiii. 266  				In sensation, the object must not be over-distant from the sense. a1921    E. S. Davison Forerunners St. Francis 		(1927)	 255  				Lyons was not overdistant from Provence, the land of the Albigensians.   over-elaborate adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1878–9    Proc. Royal Soc. 28 113  				The actual construction of a practically useful machine..does not promise to be either difficult or over-elaborate. 2001    Daily Tel. 12 June 25/5  				Only Prospero's Books, an over-elaborate riff on The Tempest, defeated Vierny's ability to make Greenaway's vision decipherable.   over-elegant adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1869    Harper's Mag. Mar. 551/1  				‘The affair is cut-and-dried,’ replied the not overelegant Aunt Blake. 1952    Amer. Hist. Rev. 57 556  				G. W. Curtis, who was thought over-elegant and condescending in his criticism of material success.   over-emotional adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1886    Jrnl. Anthropol. Inst. 15 341  				An over-emotional person perceives objects habitually as sources of feeling. 1982    A. Tyler Dinner at Homesick Restaurant iv. 114  				He loved his mother dearly but there was something overemotional about her. ΚΠ ?c1225						 (?a1200)						    Ancrene Riwle 		(Cleo. C.vi)	 		(1972)	 69  				Ne is hit naut nu..swa ouer vuel se me hit makeð.   over-exquisite adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1637    J. Milton Comus 13  				Peace brother, be not over exquisite To cast the fashion of uncertaine evils. 1883    H. E. King Starry Sign in  Bk. of Dreams 45  				O over-swift and over-exquisite Passage of unfulfilled expectancy. 1961    19th-cent. Fiction 16 75  				The enigmatic Marlow, who is..exasperated by excesses of romanticism, overexquisite sensibility, and failure to face truth.   over-extreme adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-extreme. 1971    Amer. Hist. Rev. 76 1106  				The reader is now and again made uncomfortable by what seems an overextreme false modesty. 1992    San Francisco Chron. 		(Nexis)	 6 June  a1  				Making some adjustments in some of our own overzealous, overextreme environmental regulations.   over-factious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1664    H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity  xii. v  				Out of an over-factious disgust and detestation of the contrary party. 1918    J. C. Davies Baronial Opposition to Edward II  i. xii. 303  				Another committee of official bishops, barons, not over factious, a justice, clerks and a king's serjeant.   over-faint adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1591    H. Smith Wks. 		(1867)	 II. 486  				Hence, over-faint, or over-full; Too-pined, or too-plentiful. 1908    J. Payne Vox Clamantis in  Carol & Cadence 248  				The Eternal Will, Which, through the clamour of the conflict shrill, O'erfaint to pierce the battle-din of Life, Goes murmuring like the ripple of a rill.   over-faithful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1594    T. Bowes tr.  P. de la Primaudaye French Acad.  i. 733  				They are not over-faithfull, they are all in their braverie among friends, but hartlesse among enimies. 1919    R. Kipling Years Between 87  				The overfaithful sword returns the user His heart's desire at price of his heart's blood. 1993    Econ. Jrnl. 103 990  				Over-faithful reproducibility and insufficient absorption of micro-novelty is rendering an economic structure increasingly vulnerable to being selected out.   over-famous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1777    S. Foote Capuchin 		(1778)	  iii. 127  				My old friend, when he liv'd amongst us, was never over-famous for his powers of persuasion. 1989    Forbes 		(Nexis)	 26 June 264  				The best-known closet investment fund of all is, of course, Berkshire Hathaway, run by the overfamous Warren Buffett.   over-fast adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1838    J. D. Canning Day Dreams in  Poems 163  				If one not overfast with haste should ruminate it long, He 'd find, besides a sickish taste,It savored something strong. 1949    R. Blesh Shining Trumpets 		(new ed.)	 ii. 41  				Overfast tempos did not appear in Afro-American music until very recently. 1998    C. Dow Major Recessions vii. 264  				Most of the phases of overfast growth came not under Labour but under Conservative governments.   over-fastidious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1819    P. B. Shelley Cenci Pref. p. xii  				An over-fastidious and learned choice of words. 1977    Early Music 5 482/1  				It would be over-fastidious to continue discussing the rest of the lai in even that much detail. ΚΠ a1631    J. Donne Serm. 		(1954)	 VII. 316  				That is, by not being over-fellowly with God, nor over-homely with places, and acts of Religion. ΚΠ 1483    W. Caxton tr.  J. de Voragine Golden Legende 136/1  				Ouer felon and cruelle tyraunt hast thou noo shame.   over-fierce adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1598    R. Tofte Alba  ii sig. D3v  				Headlong he runs to her spite-tainted minde, Which ouer fierce and cruell he doth finde. 1749    J. Cleland Mem. Woman of Pleasure I. 121  				Curious to explore the havoc he had made in the tender center of his over-fierce attack. 1900    A. M. Earle Stage-coach & Tavern Days 		(1969)	 xix. 410  				Nor did he ever appear overfierce in his threats and gestures.   over-foolish adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1592    R. Greene Plays & Poems 		(1905)	 305  				In height of weale who beares a careles hart, Repents too late his ouer foolish part. 1820    J. Keats Hyperion: a Fragm.  ii, in  Lamia & Other Poems 184  				Or shall we listen to the over-wise, Or to the over-foolish giant, Gods? 1946    W. E. Hocking  et al.  Pref. to Philos. 		(1947)	  v. 484  				We do not dwell upon over-foolish and impossible alternatives. ΚΠ c1440						 (?c1380–1400)						    Of Shrifte & Penance 		(St. John's Cambr. G. 30)	 		(1998)	 87  				Take kepe ȝyf [þ]ow were any mannes seketour, and ȝyf þow dest nat byssyly þat þow schuldest do for hym, for hyt were overfoul couetyse to deceue þe dede. 1675    C. Cotton Dialogue Juno & Latona in  Burlesque upon Burlesque 110  				They like their other Neighbours are, Not over-foul, nor over-fair.   over-frail adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie xcii. 566  				For wee of ourselues are ouerfraile wee cannot throughly performe the thinges that hee commaundeth us. 1680    N. Lee Cæsar Borgia  i. 11  				Think me not over-frail Because I love. a1916    J. Payne Way of Winepress 		(1920)	 91  				With these, the storm though over-frail To face, unto the end My harbourage yet I may avail 'Gainst Fortune to defend.   over-frequent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1640    J. Fletcher  et al.  Faire Maide of Inne  i. i, in  F. Beaumont  & J. Fletcher Comedies & Trag. 		(1647)	 sig. Eeeeeee/2  				You are Observd..to be over frequent In giving or receiving visits. 1854    R. S. Surtees Handley Cross lix. 410  				The memorable old customer whites..were in a somewhat perishing state from their over frequent visits to the washing tub. 1996    Times 13 Nov. 38/5  				Short lines and over-frequent, over-obvious rhymes still create a jingly effect.   over-friendly adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1712    R. Blacmore Creation  i. 96  				And with soft Breezes does the Regions cheer, On which the Sun o'er friendly does display Heat too prevailing. 1875    Harper's Mag. Apr. 666/1  				They had not been overfriendly since his inconsiderate question. 1962    E. Godfrey Retail Selling & Organization xii. 131  				Personal comments and an over-friendly manner also amount to discourtesy.   over-fruitful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1668    J. Dryden Of Dramatick Poesie 70  				The labour of Rhyme bounds and circumscribes an over-fruitful fancy. 1991    J. L. Battersby Paradigms Regained v. 95  				Any attempt to generalize from these systems to principles or conditions of ‘meaning’ and ‘reference’..would be, if not fruitless, then, what amounts to the same thing, overfruitful.   over-fussy adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1909    J. G. Brooks As Others see Us vii. 118  				We too were often overfussy and childish about our prerogatives. 1999    Your Garden June 72/4  				Their house and its interior are not over-fussy but reflect a bold, clean style. ΚΠ a1586    Sir P. Sidney Arcadia 		(1593)	  ii. f. 89v  				He left one, because she was ouerwaiward: another, because she was too soone wonne:..a fourth, because she was ouer-gamesome: the fifth [etc.]. 1641    G. Wither Prophesie 26  				Other some..Who (like the beasts that over-gamesome be) Doe push their weaker brethren with their hornes.   over-general adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1475						 (c1445)						    R. Pecock Donet 		(1921)	 23 (MED)  				Þe teching of meenal vertu were ouer derk and..ouer general and ouer confuse. 1597    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  v. lxv. 158  				Either they must reforme their speech as ouer-generall, or els condemne their owne practise as vnlawfull. 1990    N. Baker Room Temperature iv. 22  				‘Sigh’ is misleadingly over-general, and not a good match for the..semivoiced ‘Heem!’ that she actually made.   over-genial adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1854    H. Miller My Schools & Schoolmasters xvi. 342  				A business..which bore about it a hopeful & promising air so long as the over-genial season lasted. 1997    Sunday Mirror 		(Nexis)	 16 Mar. 27  				If you are the life and soul of the party no one will think the boss is being over-genial.   over-gentle adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1560    J. Daus tr.  J. Sleidane Commentaries f. cxciiij  				He hym selfe hath bene ouer-gentle to hym. 1885    Bot. Gaz. 10 319  				Their house was taken possession of and searched by the not over-gentle police. 1989    Independent 		(Nexis)	 26 June 14  				Not helped much by the production's overgentle pace, the play seems to stutter forward by fits and starts. ΚΠ a1613    T. Overbury Crumms King James's Table in  Wks. 		(1856)	 263  				Wisdome is moderation, and the goodness of things is the mean, a man may be overwise and overgodly. 1698    P. A. Motteux Beauty in Distress Prol.  				Ev'n we Players, not over-godly neither, Fasted the week, that none of you came hither. 1717    E. Ward Coll. Hist. & State Poems 4  				In that over-godly Season, When Truth was more a Crime than Treason.   over-good adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1470    T. Malory Morte Darthur 		(Winch. Coll.)	 742  				Sir Launcelot..is to over good for ony knyght that now ys lyvynge. a1639    J. Dyke Right Receiving of Christ 		(1640)	 v. 61  				An over good conceit of a mans owne condition and estate..disconceits a man of the necessity of Christ. 1904    C. M. Skinner Little Gardens i  				In his hunger for the soil, that develops when a man—or his wife—acquires a bit of yard, there is a tendency to..be overgood to it, expecting impossible returns.   over-grateful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1652    R. Brome Mad Couple Well Match'd  i. i. sig. B3, in  Five New Playes 		(1653)	  				You should overweene that I had ability to wrastle any more with your overgratefull Unkle in your behalfe. 1886    ‘M. Field’ Brutus Ultor  ii. iii. 22  				The few bosom-thoughts I entertain, O'er-grateful for my hospitality, Come to my side, unsought. 1927    Times 1 Dec. 24/5  				I am not sure that I am over-grateful to those operators on the share market who have so popularized our shares.   over-greasy adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1575    G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 218  				It is easily founde, when a hawke is ouergreasie. 2000    People 		(Nexis)	 23 Jan.  				It helps absorb the oil in over-greasy hair.   over-gross adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1475    tr.  Henri de Mondeville Surgery 		(Wellcome)	 f. 156 (MED)  				Alle manere of medicyns þat schal be putt to woundis of senewis & oþere siche schal be hoot & not cold, drie and not moist..& not ouer groce substaunce & of greet attraccioun & not opilatiue, i. stopping. 1587    Sir P. Sidney  & A. Golding tr.  P. de Mornay Trewnesse Christian Relig. xi. 150  				A manifest guyle, or at leastwise an ouergrosse ignorance. 1996    16th Cent. Jrnl. 27 622  				There are..no overgross simplifications of complex historical events or processes to mar the argument.   over-guilty adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1676    G. Towerson Explic. Decalogue 226  				Those..who are not ouer-guilty of it themselves. 2001    Chicago Sun-Times 		(Nexis)	 6 May 38  				This new information is just dumping more angst on already overguilty moms. ΚΠ 1575    G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 355  				To the end she be not proude or overhaught of his drawing out of the mew.   over-haughty adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1592    R. Greene Hist. Orlando Furioso 		(1594)	 sig. Fiij  				A question ouer-hautie for thy weed. 1876    Atlantic Monthly Sept. 369/1  				His eccentric and over-haughty individuality made him unpopular even among his friends. 1925    A. T. Murray tr.  Homer Iliad II.  xv. 113  				Thou knowest what manner of mood is his, how over-haughty and unbending.   over-heady adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1890    F. W. O. Ward 'Twixt Kiss & Lip 457  				Her mind is wide, her wit is ready..And if a trifle over-heady—Why, that is half the fun. 1995    Times 		(Nexis)	 27 July  				This way you will keep cool and hydrated without getting over-heady in the heat. ΚΠ a1568    R. Ascham Scholemaster in  Eng. Wks. 		(1904)	 203  				A common perdon for ill doing, if the fault, of it selfe be not ouer heinous. ΚΠ 1617    G. Markham Cavelarice 		(new ed.)	  vi. 53  				The crooked hoofe,..the ouer-hollow or drie hoofe, as those of Barbaries and Turkes.   over-homely adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1617    S. Hieron Christians liue-loode in  Wks. 		(1620)	 II. 51  				In preaching my desire hath euer beene, & I trust shall be, as not to be ouer-homely, which were ill befitting the oracles of God. 1888    M. E. Sandford T. Poole & his Friends I. xii. 210  				Coleridge not unfrequently jars upon the sensitiveness of a severely exclusive taste in precisely the same way, by some deliberately clumsy joke, unsavoury metaphor, outrageous pun, or over-homely simile.   over-honest adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1637    J. Shirley Gamester  iii. sig. E  				Shees so precise, and over honest, I had as good nere atempt her. 1866    ‘G. Eliot’ Felix Holt I. Introd. 15  				It was not so well for a lawyer to be over-honest, else he might not be up to other people's tricks. 1997    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 4 May  ii. 4/1  				He actually clambers onto the table to formalize his rejection of Anne-Marie Duff's overhonest Cordelia.   over-huge adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?a1475						 (?a1425)						    tr.  R. Higden Polychron. 		(Harl. 2261)	 		(1876)	 VI. 381  				This Charls refusede his wife for overhuge familiarite betwene hir and the bischop Vercellense. 1590    T. Fenne Hecubaes Mishaps in  Frutes sig. Ee3v  				The heauy harnesse ouer huge my husband would assay: That being on, his speare in hand could scarce his body stay. 2001    Milwaukee 		(Wisconsin)	 Jrnl. Sentinel 		(Nexis)	 4 July 6  b  				Bedecked in their characteristic overhuge, almost-zoot suits.   over-idle adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1596    W. Warner Albions Eng. 		(rev. ed.)	  ix. xlix. 227  				By this (for ouer-idle seemd to English hearts the Shore) Our Gallants did imbarke each-wheare, and made our Forces more. 1998    Women & their Sister; Comments Please in  soc.women 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 10 May  				His over idle hands will be allowed to indulge and generally cause havoc and destruction. ΚΠ 1664    H. More Modest Enq. Myst. Iniquity 471  				Some may peradventure be over-inclinable to imagine the Episcopal Office & revenues to have a greater propinquity with that hypothesis than any indifferent Man can possibly judge. a1680    J. Glanvill Saducismus Triumphatus 		(1681)	  ii. 310  				He was suspected haply for some complaisance towards some persons that were over-inclinable to Hobbianism. ΚΠ 1871    R. Ellis tr.  Catullus Poems lxxviii. 5  				An o'er-incurious husband.   over-ingenious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1849    Amer. Rev. Feb. 123/1  				The manner in which our author in general executes the task imposed by his somewhat vague and not over ingenious plan. 1858    W. Bagehot Coll. Wks. 		(1965)	 II. 70  				It would be over-ingenious to argue..that he had no peculiar interest in young ladies in general. 1994    18th-cent. Stud. 28 20  				This posture is complicated throughout by Swift's implication that modernism consists precisely in overingenious rationality.   over-insistent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1888    Atlantic Monthly Apr. 468/2  				Poor Miss Tita colored, as if she found me over-insistent. 1977    N.Y. Rev. Bks. 13 Oct. 35/2  				The slightly overinsistent Ciceronianisms here draw attention to themselves.   over-insolent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1594    T. Bowes tr.  P. de la Primaudaye French Acad.  i. 620  				Let him not suffer his people to be over-insolent, nor yet to be troden under foot & oppressed. 1823    W. Scott Quentin Durward 		(1831)	 II. xix. 362  				Now, by my honour,..that is over insolent in an unworthy adventurer! 1930    R. Aldington tr.  Euripides Alcestis  iv. i. 44  				You are over-insolent, and you shall not leave thus, after wounding me with your boyish insults.   over-jealous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1450    Pater Noster Richard Ermyte 		(Westm. Sch. 3)	 		(1967)	 19  				God to vs seiþ þat we noȝt ouergelous be ouer oure owne fleisch. 1605    True Chron. Hist. King Leir sig. F3  				Her..whom I confesse I wrongd, Through doting frenzy, and o're-ielous loue. 1964    Transition No. 17. 33/2  				The husband brings little things for her, buys her good clothes and beads, and is almost overjealous about her.   over-judicious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1718    Free-thinker No. 39. 1  				An over-judicious Author..polishes away the Strength and Energy of his Thoughts. 1975    Amer. Hist. Rev. 80 1335/2  				The author's own conclusions are overjudicious and tentative.   over-just adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1610    Bp. J. Hall 		(title)	  				A common apologie of the Church of England: against the vniust challenges of the ouer-iust sect, commonly called Brownists. 1671    J. Milton Samson Agonistes 514  				Then who self-rigorous chooses death as due; Which argues over-just, and self-displeas'd For self-offence, more then for God  offended.       View more context for this quotation 1983    MERIP Rep. No. 114. 12/2  				Then, according to tradition, a voice from heaven proclaimed: ‘Be not overjust.’   over-keen adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1821    W. Scott Kenilworth I. vii. 182  				I cannot remember, sir, that its edge was ever over keen. 1898    Argosy Sept. 332  				The old hags at the bazaars who are not over keen to penetrate disguises. 1977    J. Bingham Marriage Bureau Murders x. 130  				A girl in trouble with an over-keen lover.   over-lascivious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1602    R. Carew Surv. Cornwall 		(1769)	 115  				But I may not grow over-lascivious in extolling. 1992    Christian Sci. Monitor 		(Nexis)	 21 Apr. 11  				Michael Cristofer and Kathleen Widdoes endow an overlascivious Claudius and Gertrude with a touch of royal class. ΚΠ 1668    H. More Divine Dialogues 		(1713)	  iii. vii. 195  				Which you do, Cuphophron, over-Lawyer-like, supporting your Clients without any regard to the Truth. ΚΠ 1584    T. Cogan Hauen of Health 		(1636)	 115  				Medlars..are good after meales, especially for such as bee over-laxative.   over-lenient adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1834    Southern Lit. Messenger Nov. 112/2  				Age..has not been over lenient with me. 1877    V. Fane Anthony Babington  i. iii. 43  				Folk over-lenient, foolishly o'er-fond, and over-trustful. 1989    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 27 Feb.  a18/4  				Viewing the convictions for first-degree manslaughter, rather than murder, in three highly publicized cases as overlenient. ΚΠ a1618    W. Raleigh Disc. Orig. Cause Warre 		(1650)	 sig. Fv  				Some few Popes may have been overlewd, by their own private natures, and thereby have swarved from the rule of policy. ΚΠ 1579    T. North tr.  Plutarch Liues 1034  				The ouerlicentious and imperious tyrannie of Dionysius. 1634    W. Habington Castara 		(1870)	 99  				The free and open discovery of thoughts to woman can not passe without an over licentious familiarity, or a justly occasion'd suspition. ΚΠ 1592    G. Harvey Foure Lett. iii. 33  				The Grecians generallie were ouer-lightheaded.   over-lively adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1656    Earl of Monmouth tr.  T. Boccalini Ragguagli di Parnasso  i. xli. 83  				Bold, and over-lively wits are not very fit to govern others. 1748    S. Richardson Clarissa IV. ix. 35  				Such a young creature as this, who had by her advice saved even her over-lively friend from marrying a fop, and a libertine. 1958    Hist. Jrnl. 1 138  				Mackenzie was obviously an enthusiast with an over-lively imagination.   over-lofty adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1579    T. Palfreyman Baldwin's Treat. Morall Philos. 		(new ed.)	  x. ii. f. 204  				Malicious men..in their proude ouerlaughty, & stoute courage..spareth not at al times..to blowe out..the..blastes of slaunderous and euill reportes. 1868    E. H. Plumptre tr.  Æschylus Persians in  tr.  Æschylus Trag. II. 44  				Zeus is the avenger of o'erlofty thoughts. 1996    Sunday Times 14 July  x. 29/1  				Mengelberg's way was, by today's standards, heavy-handed, over-lofty and too sentimental.   over-logical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1641    J. Milton Animadversions 27  				They have..thought him if not an over-logicall, yet a well-meaning man. 1920    W. R. Inge Truth & Falsehood in Relig. 19  				Exclusive intellectualism in religion..commits us to an over-logical scheme. 1966    Eng. Stud. 47 299  				Occasionally Williams seems to make Shakespeare over-logical.   over-loose adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1668    H. More Divine Dialogues 		(1713)	  iii. xx. 221  				Such as the over-severe, or over-loose, methods of living in reference to future Happiness. 1983    Financial Times 		(Nexis)	 17 Nov.  i. 16  				There is already concern that the monetary and fiscal climate has been overloose for many months past.   over-luxuriant adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1725    R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at May  				The shortning over-luxuriant Branches in all Fruit-trees, except Vines, to two Inches of the Place from whence they shoot. 1880    E. Lee-Hamilton Gods, Saints & Men 95  				The waving leaves, and tendrils fresh and green, Of o'er-luxuriant and intrusive creepers. 1964    Econ. Hist. Rev. 17 158  				The vivid style is marred only by an occasional over-luxuriant metaphor. ΚΠ a1500    R. Henryson tr.  Æsop Fables: Lion & Mouse l. 1428 in  Poems 		(1981)	 57  				Ouer malapart and eik presumpteous Thow wes, to mak out ouer me thy tripping. 1606    P. Holland tr.  Suetonius Hist. Twelve Caesars Index sig. A4/2v  				Heluidius Priscus over malapert with Vespasian the Emperour. 1819    W. Scott Ivanhoe III. iv. 95  				Waldemar Fitzurse, much hast thou taken upon thee; and over malapert thou wert to cause trumpet to blow, or banner to be raised,..without our express command. 1837    C. Richardson New Dict. Eng. Lang. II. 1389/2  				Over-malapert.]			   over-mean adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1598    R. Tofte Alba  iii. sig. F8  				My Loue which is to thee more then extreame, Requite not with a fortune, ouer meane. a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  ii. xxx. 101  				It is a fruit of an overmeane conceit of God, when we will cause him to be a servant to our lusts, and unreasonable fancies. 1903    J. Payne Vigil & Vision 80  				He put off empire, like a worn-out wede, For hero's wearing waxen overmean.   over-meek adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1557    Earl of Surrey et al.  Songes & Sonettes 		(new ed.)	 f. 114  				Nor ouermeek, nor ouerferse he was. 1875    ‘B. De Garçon’ Kishoge Papers 6  				He scarcely could speak, So swollen was his cheek, For the Sacristan's temper was not over meek.   over-mellow adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1832    Ld. Tennyson Lotos-eaters: Choric Song iii, in  Poems 		(new ed.)	 112  				The fulljuiced apple, waxing overmellow. 1990    R. Blount First Hubby 11  				Yet the government is not overmellow... On the contrary, it is too mean.   over-merciful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1614    T. Adams Diuells Banket i. 24  				Great men are vnmercifull to their Tenants, that they may be ouer-mercifull to their Tendents. 1652    E. Benlowes Theophila Pref.  				Where there is unmercifull oppression and overmerciful Connivence. 1971    Dict. National Biogr. 1951–60 at Asquith, Cyril  				There was some complaint that he was over-merciful in sentencing the guilty, but this did not bother him.   over-merry adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1616    W. Shakespeare Taming of Shrew 		(1623)	 Induct. i. 135  				Haply my presence May well abate the ouer-merrie  spleene.       View more context for this quotation 1765    I. Bickerstaff Maid of Mill  ii. v. 32  				I am not in an over-merry mood myself. 1938    M. Ludwig tr.  L. Lehmann Midway in My Song ix. 119  				[She] came to the rescue of many a wobbly ensemble when the overmerry flower maidens were fooling round with..Otto Marak.   over-mighty adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1475    J. Fortescue Governance of Eng. 		(Laud)	 		(1885)	 127  				Perellis that mey come to the kyng by ouer myghtye subgettes. 1887    W. Morris tr.  Homer Odyssey I.  i. x. 188  				There was one Elpenor, the youngest;..In war not over-mighty. 1984    Daily Tel. 27 July 14/2  				He believes fervently that the Executive has become overmighty.   over-mild adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1656    J. Trapp Exposition 		(1868)	 388  				They stir up one another to more madness, as if hitherto they had been over-mild, and used too much gentleness. 1848    E. C. Gaskell Mary Barton I. x. 180  				Her temper was high..and her answers not overmild. 1911    Amer. Hist. Rev. 16 367  				Criticism is modest throughout, never extravagant in praise, or over-mild in censure.   over-moist adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1590    W. Clever Flower of Phisicke 46  				Thinges which be ouer moyst. 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §706  				Either by an over-dry heat, or an over-moist heat. 1932    W. Lewis Filibusters in Barbary Foreword p. vii  				I promised myself that I would forget this squalid quagmire of an oasis, over-moist London.   over-neat adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1691    W. Mountfort Greenwich-Park  iv. ii. 44  				Very honest hearty fellows they call Beaux, who setting by their blinde side of being a little over-neat will be Drunk with their friends. 1714    Spectator No. 591. ⁋21  				A Woman who from being a Slattern becomes over-neat, or from being over-neat becomes a Slattern, is most certainly in Love. 1989    Holiday Which? Jan. 51/1  				You can still wander around the overneat village of St. Jean.   over-new adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1742    H. Fielding Joseph Andrews II.  iii. vi. 111  				Did ever Mortal such a Parson view; His Cassock old, his Wig not over-new ?       View more context for this quotation 1886    W. W. Story Giannone in  Poems II. 89  				A scarlet fez with a tassel blue Perched on his head, not over-new.   over-nimble adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1640    E. Reynolds Treat. Passions 		(c1688)	 xviii  				An overnimble desire is like the stomack of a sick man newly recovered, more greedy than strong. 1885    W. B. Yeats in  Dublin Univ. Rev. June 111/2  				Cease! no more! Thou hast an over-nimble tongue. ΚΠ 1748    S. Richardson Clarissa III. xi. 84  				A mother over-notable; a daughter over-sensible; and their Hickman, who is—over-neither.   over-obedient adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1631    J. Donne Let. to Sir H. Goodeere in  Lett. to Severall Persons of Honour 		(1651)	 101  				Hertofore the inobedient Puritans, and now the over-obedient Papists attempt you. 1866    Spectator 28 Apr. 461/2  				He is the best of servants, a kindly, but over-watchful, and it may be over-obedient, man. 1989    E. Hoffman Lost in Transl. 		(1991)	  iii. 196  				A very scholarly and somewhat overobedient structuralist critique of working-class movements in late-eighteenth-century England.   over-obese adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1654    E. Gayton Pleasant Notes Don Quixot  i. iii. 8  				One said of an Over-Obese Priest that he was a great Arminian. 2001    Macon 		(Georgia)	 Tel. 		(Nexis)	 10 Sept.  d1  				‘I am terribly over-obese,’ one of the survey's male virgins noted.   over-obsequious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1631    J. Donne Serm. 		(?1839)	 IV. 408  				Those tyrannous Officers & Over-obsequious Priests. 1988    Times 		(Nexis)	 29 Mar.  				Consistency and a recognizable house-style usually come from an over-dominant teacher and over-obsequious pupils.   over-obvious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1913    Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 10 669  				What might be called the American sin of over-obvious spiritual pabulum. 1951    A. Koestler Age of Longing  ii. iv. 243  				Not to mention such over-obvious facts as the disparity in the number of divisions. ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  i. vi. 83  				To behold the sinnes of Parents and other superiours with an over-open and greedy eye, with scoffes and contempt of them of piety.   over-optimistic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1894    Atlantic Monthly Nov. 599/2  				Seward has been severely criticised because he was jovial, patient, and over-optimistic. 1944    Chicago Daily News 4 Nov. 6/1  				Engaging highbinders and sharpies who are not exactly thieves, but more than slightly overoptimistic in their use of..other people's money. 1976    Broadcast 29 Mar. 4/1  				Over-optimistic predictions of BBC income in the coming year. ΚΠ 1606    Bp. J. Hall Arte Diuine Medit. iv. 19  				It is with Meditations as with Medicines; which, with ouer-ordinary vse lose their Soueraignty; and fill, in stead of purging.   over-orthodox adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1698    J. Norris Pract. Disc. Divine Subj. IV. 414  				A Zealous and Over-Orthodox Adversary thinking to Contradict me. 1979    Econ. Jrnl. 89 452  				Most of this material..is orthodox enough: indeed, occasionally over-orthodox, particularly in the credence given to the Laffer–Mundell argument for monetary union. ΚΠ 1680    H. More Apocalypsis Apocalypseos 287  				It was obvious to any one that is not over oscitant to conclude, the sixth Trumpet is past without its being said so.   over-painful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1710    E. Ward Vulgus Britannicus: 2nd Pt. v. 58  				That the Turky, Goose, or Pheasant..Should by his over painful Teaching..Be pall'd, o'er roasted and unfit, For such a Fine-mouth'd Saint to eat. 1998    Re: Yes or No, that is all I Need in  alt.peeves 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 30 June  				The classic cycle of induction leading to over-painful contractions, necessitating an epidural anaesthetic, in turn making the mother unable to push properly.   over-particular adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1726    J. Swift Gulliver I.  ii. v. 87  				The handsomest among these Maids of Honor..would sometimes set me astride upon one of her Nipples, with many other Tricks, wherein the Reader will excuse me for not being over particular. 1848    J. R. Lowell Fable for Critics 		(ed. 2)	 39  				To hear, you're not over-particular whence, Almost Taylor's profusion, quite Latimer's sense. 1937    Amer. Home Apr. 108/2  				If one is not over-particular as to their origin and the material used in their construction, those now being made in the Far East are very usable and not prohibitive in price for the small-home-owner.   over-passionate adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1599    E. Sandys Europæ Speculum 		(1632)	 130  				The dreames..of some over-passionate desires. 1849    J. A. Froude Nemesis of Faith 108  				Very little good comes to children from over-passionate straining in this matter. 1976    Amer. Hist. Rev. 81 281  				They all appear immune from the afflictions of an overpassionate heart.   over-patient adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1635    T. Randolph Muses Looking-glasse  v. i. 88 in  Poems 		(1638)	  				And when I am not over patient, To put up such grosse wrongs as call me coward. 1881    ‘M. Twain’ Prince & Pauper 137  				I like not much bandying of words, being not overpatient in my nature. 1987    A. Theroux Adultery 154  				It was the sort of overpatient condescension one usually finds administered in a nurselike way.   over-pensive adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1633    A. Munday John a Kent 		(1923)	 8  				These passions more then ouerpensiue. 1711    Ld. Shaftesbury Characteristicks III. Misc.  v. iii. 301  				The deeply-loaded and over-pensive Gentlemen, who esteeming it the truest Wit to pursue what they call their Interest, wonder to find [etc.]. 2002    Washington Post 		(Nexis)	 16 Sept.  c5  				Norwegian pianist Leif Ove Andsnes played his compatriot Grieg's Piano Concerto with romantic elasticity but an over-pensive touch.   over-peremptory adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1602    T. A. Massacre of Money sig. F  				But if her pride be ouer peremptory, Our hands and not our tongues shall win the glory. 1998    Memphis 		(Tennessee)	 Flyer 		(Electronic ed.)	 18 June  				Whatever the merits of that charge (and of the first-term congressman's arguably over-peremptory manner in putting it forth). ΚΠ 1660    H. More Explan. Grand Myst. Godliness  vii. xi. 325  				Which arguments certainly cannot but have their due weight with them that are not over-pervicacious.   over-pessimistic adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1898    Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 8 221  				It may be wise for the over-pessimistic minister to ask himself how far his own warfare has gone. 1995    Daily Tel. 25 July 8/8  				The action group is convinced that the governors' projections are over-pessimistic.   over-picturesque adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1930    Pacific Affairs 3 889  				The first chapters, disentangled from a somewhat over-picturesque verbiage, are solidly useful. 1938    L. MacNeice Mod. Poetry 10  				His [sc. Housman's] hanged man, his soldiers, are over-picturesque. ΚΠ 1592    T. Nashe Strange Newes 193  				Whilest I am bemoaning his ouer-pitteous decay.   over-plain adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1668    G. C. in  H. More Divine Dialogues 		(1713)	 Pref. p. vi  				His over-plain and open opposing that so-much-admired Philosopher Renatus Des Cartes. 1735    R. Dodsley Beauty 5  				She's so over-free, so over-plain, So unpolite, so awkward, so ungain. 1926    H. W. Fowler Dict. Mod. Eng. Usage 189/2  				Not only may decency be outraged sometimes by over-plain speech.   over-plausible adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1586    Sir P. Sidney Arcadia 		(1593)	  v. f. 232  				Neither regarding a prisoners passionate prayer, nor bearing ouerplausible eares to a many hedded motion. 1917    Chicago Daily News 2 Oct. in  R. Chaplin Wobbly 		(1948)	 xx. 231  				Where La Follette is explosive or Mayor Thompson overplausible and grievous, Haywood takes it easy.   over-plenteous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1589    W. Warner Albions Eng. 		(new ed.)	  v. xxiii. 103  				Our natiue Stories yeeld Of Myters medling with our Sword an ouerplenteous feeld. 1903    E. Fawcett Voices & Visions 108  				Note her plaintive eyes Brim with large tears, like over-plenteous dew Burdening twin blooms.   over-plentiful adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1573    J. Daus tr.  H. Bullinger Hundred Serm. vpon Apocalipse 		(rev. ed.)	 xxxviii. f. 111v  				Exceedingly ouerplentifull was this darnell throughout the vniuersal church. 1699    Woman's Malice 12  				This Rodulus..was left Heir to a considerable, tho (in respect of his Quality) not over plentiful Estate. 1987    Jrnl. Afr. Hist. 28 39  				If mixed romauls were over-plentiful and gunpowder scarce, the Fante merchant would simply refuse to take more romauls than he needed in a barter.   over-plump adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1867    Galaxy Sept. 536  				Lady Eleanor was of middle height, and somewhat over plump. 1959    Amer. Lit. 31 212  				The girl, dreamy, over-plump, a persistent scribbler, a good student, had to make her own way to New York.   over-polemical adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1682    H. More Annot. Disc. Truth 227 in  Two Choice & Useful Treat.  				It is the symptome of an over-Polemical Fencer, to deny a thing merely because he finds it not for his Form. 1970    Amer. Hist. Rev. 75 812  				A certain overpolemical tendency can be illustrated by his objection to a sentence of the French historian Pierre Vilar. ΚΠ 1599    E. Sandys Europæ Speculum 		(1632)	 102  				This over-politick and too wise Order. 1642    J. Milton Reason Church-govt. 49  				Lest..she doe not with her overpolitick fetches marre all.   over-ponderous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1585    J. Sharrock tr.  C. Ocland Elizabeth Queene sig. C*4*, in  tr.  Valiant Actes & Victorious Battailes Eng. Nation  				Which lawes in equall ballance weyes, and cancelling out doth strike, Which ouer ponderous to him seemes. 2001    Tatler July 61/2  				The novel..is absorbing and for every overponderous moment there is a profound one.   over-popular adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1668    H. More Divine Dialogues 		(1713)	  v. xv. 461  				The invincible Obscurity of his Writings will prevent his being over-popular. 1883    Science 7 Dec. 743/1  				Too much cannot be said in recognition of this interest in a branch of science not over-popular in these days. 1986    MLN 101 135  				Sannazaro's success with the Arcadia..made the bucolic compositions become overpopular.   over-positive adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1684    T. Burnet Theory of Earth  ii. To Rdr.  				The greatest fault..is to be over-positive and dogmatical. 1994    Man 29 742/1  				If anything, Iwao is over-positive in reaction to this stereotype.   over-potent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1593    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  i. x. 80  				The priuate intents of men ouer-potent in the common welth. 1671    J. Milton Samson Agonistes 427  				Thou..Temptation found'st, or over-potent charms To violate the sacred trust of silence Deposited within  thee.       View more context for this quotation 1912    C. A. Smith Star-treader 54  				The sentinel stars Are dead with overpotent flame.   over-precise adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1613    in  M. C. Questier Newslett. Archpresbyterate G. Birkhead 		(1998)	 184  				Some..thinke me over precise in observinge my commission. a1617    S. Hieron Wks. 		(1620)	 I. 45  				Indeed I am not ouer precise; for I hold that to be more then needes: I am no medler with the scriptures; that I account to be beyond my reach. 1814    J. Austen Mansfield Park I. xv. 295  				We must not be over precise Edmund. As Mr. Rushworth is to act too, there can be no  harm.       View more context for this quotation 1993    Eng. Today Apr. 20/1  				Singaporeans..often speak in a way that seems over-precise to people in southern England.   over-pregnant adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1590–1    J. Burel tr.  Pamphilus in  Poems sig. A3v  				Nor thocht I be not of Precoxel spreit, Nor into wit, ouer pregnant or pereit. 1883    R. Broughton Belinda III.  iii. viii. 45  				Silence becomes too oppressive, and they speak; but then speech grows over-pregnant, and they fly back to silence. 1995    Revelation in  rec.arts.poems 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 30 Mar.  				Answers fall like raindrops from overpregnant clouds.   over-presumptuous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1566    W. Painter Palace of Pleasure I. xl. f. 109  				I doubt, and it shall please your maiestie, lest I shall seeme ouer presumptuous, and rashe vnto you, if I dooe discouer the secretes of my harte. 1980    Hist. Jrnl. 23 533  				Certain men in France had become over-confident, over-ambitious, over-presumptuous.   over-prolific adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1853    Sci. Amer. 16 July 349/1  				Our readers know full well that we are somewhat cautious, and not over-prolific of praise. 1907    Publ. Amer. Econ. Assoc. 8 87  				The equilibrium may be restored by the overprolific people adopting the standards of the less prolific. 1923    D. H. Lawrence Birds, Beasts & Flowers 		(N.Y. ed.)	 149  				Those over-prolific white mice.   over-prolix adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1616    A. Champney Treat. Vocation Bishops xvii. 246  				Of this same subiect he hath a large discourse vpon the Psal.33. conci.  i. which is ouer prolix to be related here S. Ambrose is as plaine, saying.]			 1661    R. Boyle Some Considerations Style Script. 205  				To Recover my self at length from my Over-prolix Digression. 1901    Philos. Rev. 10 108  				The style of the author seems over-prolix. The argument could have been stated in a third of the space.   over-prompt adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1748    S. Richardson Clarissa IV. xxxiii. 195  				Many a faint-hearted man, when he began in jest..has been forced into earnest, by being over-prompt, and taken at his word. 1866    J. G. Whittier Snow-bound 44  				The generous heart O'er-prompt to do with Heaven its part. 1991    Independent 		(Nexis)	 29 May 11  				Among the many medically known symptoms are short attention spans, impatience, over-prompt decision-making, agitation and emotional volatility.   over-prone adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1483    tr.  Adam of Eynsham Reuelation xix  				Thys man whoys sine & perelle we speke of now yt hyt schulde be feryd & dredde yn hys wolde days was ouer prone & redy to dronkenes. 1597    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  v. xlvi. 94  				Rash, sinister, and suspitious verdits, whereunto they are ouer-prone. 1723    A. Philips Humfrey  iv. vii. 52  				So apt is Power to warp with Passion; And, so over-prone is Censure. 1976    N. Freeling Lake Isle viii. 51  				His ma..was overprone, maybe, to well-meant advice about bringing up the children and such.   over-provident adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1651    T. Hobbes Leviathan  i. xii. 52  				Every man, especially those that are over provident, are in an estate like to that of Prometheus. 1828    Lights & Shades Eng. Life II. 184  				An old over-provident housekeeper. 1881    Atlantic Monthly Aug. 172/2  				It is never so cold for any length of time as to make a subsistence precarious and people over-provident.   over-prudent adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1709    D. Manley Secret Mem. 125  				She thought again she was not over-prudent to publish her Resentment and Concern to all the World. 1864    A. Trollope Can you forgive Her? I. xi. 84  				She..was, if I may say, over-prudent in calculating the chances of her happiness and of his. 1996    Sunday Times 12 May  i. 2/6  				It looks as though she intends to make her financial affairs hard to follow if she does have to pay up. It seems a bit over-prudent for someone who says she is innocent.   over-public adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  ii. xxxi. 121  				The manner of his accusation was over-publique, when it should and might have been private. 1992    Jrnl. Mod. Afr. Stud. 30 719  				Some of their over-public and occasionally pious political sentiments are already starting to sound dated.   over-puissant adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1650    Bp. J. Hall Revelation Unrevealed viii  				Overpuissant opposites. 1921    C. Morley Chimneysmoke 140  				Watches tick, and over-puissant Time Benumbs the eager brain.   over-quiet adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1590–1    J. Burel tr.  Pamphilus in  Poems sig. B4  				See thou be not ouer quiet or degest, Naither thy toung superfluously apply. a1963    L. MacNeice Coll. Poems 		(1979)	 435  				A seemingly empty train which saunters through..a candid And overquiet landscape.   over-rapid adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1838    N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 356  				Collateral points that so commonly arrest or distract men of weak judgment or over rapid association. 1964    Ann. Reg. 1963 263  				Credit also became tighter, and full employment created the conditions for an over-rapid rise in wages and salaries.   over-rational adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1713    Ld. Shaftesbury Characteristicks 		(1715)	 III.  iii. iii. 306  				'Tis thought dangerous for us to be over-rational; or too much Masters of our-selves, in what we draw, by just Conclusions, from Reason only. 1965    Science 9 Apr. 211/3  				The man Diesel is..a proud, over-rational neurotic, with chronic headaches and occasional breakdowns.   over-ready adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1440						 (?c1380–1400)						    Of Shrifte & Penance 		(St. John's Cambr. G. 30)	 		(1998)	 69  				To chydinges some byth overredy. 1616    R. Niccols Sir Thomas Overburies Vision 22  				Why like his spurres, Will ye be ouer ready at his heeles. 1859    W. Bagehot Coll. Wks. 		(1965)	 II. 114  				We may seem to make unusual criticisms, and to be over-ready with depreciation or objection. 1992    Economist 31 Oct. 14/1  				He seems to be over-ready with the tax breaks to keep firms sweet.   over-resolute adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  ii. xxvi. 82  				Be not over-resolute in any thing, this I will not doe, that I will not doe: God may have purposed that that shall be done which thou resolvest shall not. a1943    H. R. Zimmer King & Corpse 		(1956)	  i. 129  				If the animal within is killed by an overresolute morality..the conscious personality will never be vivified by the hidden forces that underlie and sustain it.   over-rife adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1535    M. Coverdale Goostly Psalmes f. xiiiiv  				My synnes droue me dayly to hell..I was also in them ouer ryfe. 1586    W. Warner Albions Eng.  iii. xvii. 69  				The Scottes and Pichtes did sunder hence, the Brutons, ouer ryffe In Largesse making frollike Cheer. 1870    J. A. Heraud In-gathering 28  				Away at once with shadows, over-rife With disappointment.   over-righteous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1653    J. Gauden Hieraspistes 253  				It is easie for well-affected Christians to be over-scrupulous, and over-righteous. 1742    M. Jones Let. 18 Feb. in  Misc. in Prose & Verse 		(1750)	 237  				Those pious Forms of Confession one meets with in some over-righteous Books, which shock ones Nature to repeat. 1979    L. Blue Back Door to Heaven 		(1985)	 iv. 30  				Songs of Vilna and poverty, with digs at drunken cantors and over-righteous Rabbis.   over-rough adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  ii. xxix. 143  				Let no man abstaine from doing such a good office to his Governour though it seeme not so pleasing for the time, onely so that an over-rough manner of doing doe not add to the bitternesse of the thing. 1884    Harper's Mag. Apr. 800/1  				His ways are overrough. 1980    Math. of Computation 35 998  				To prevent overrough use of these remarks we add that some qualifications must be made if E is very large.   over-rude adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1568    G. Turberville tr.  D. Mancinus Plaine Path to Perfect Vertue sig. Fiij  				Nor doth the man that barrs thee from this nicenesse here in deede, Persuade thee to be ouer rude. a1894    R. L. Stevenson Monmouth 		(1928)	  ii. 22  				I could not die unheard: I could not die, Her thinking me a lackey over-rude. 1916    Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 13 371  				Frowning upon any over-rude anti-intellectualism.   over-russet adj.  Brit.  , U.S.   rareΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-russet.   over-sad adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1450    Of Manners 		(Lamb. 853)	 in  Babees Bk. 		(2002)	  i. 34  				In companies be neuere to tale-wijs, Ne ouer myrie, ne ouer sadde. 1615    G. Sandys Relation of Journey 262  				The mind is now and then a litle to be cherished, and set free from an ouer-sad sobrietie. 1898    T. Hardy Wessex Poems 137  				A lapse over-sad for a lady Of her pedigree! 1955    Kingston 		(N.Y.)	 Daily Freeman 12 Nov. 4/2  				Try to be neutral in mood, slightly on the cheerful side, but neither overjoyed nor oversad.   over-sanguine adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1710    Ld. Shaftesbury Soliloquy 93  				The florid and over-sanguine Humour of the high Stile was allay'd by something of a contrary nature. 1869    M. Arnold Culture & Anarchy iii. 136  				This certainly does appear over-sanguine. 1937    ‘M. Innes’ Hamlet, Revenge!  iii. i. 213  				There had been spies..and one of them had doubtless sent away an over-sanguine message. ΚΠ 1596    H. Clapham Briefe of Bible  ii. Ep. Ded. 2  				Your Worships aimable construction shal giue vitall power to my over-saples sentences. ΚΠ 1576    G. Pettie Petite Pallace 79  				It may be you wil thinke me ouer saucy with my lisping lips to prefer persuasions to them, who are as voyde of folly euery way as my selfe of wit any way. 1641    W. Prynne Antipathie 9  				His over-sawcie speeches and carriage to the King, and his refusing to acknowledge his fault. ΚΠ 1653    E. Chisenhale Catholike Hist. 308  				Some who would be over-scrutinous to examine the points of this Commission by the rule of the holy Writ.   over-sensational adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1879    19th Cent. Jan. 42  				Will any one say that the authors of these passages have sinned in being over-sensational? 1970    Family Planning Perspectives 2 46/1  				The Kistner volume is stated to be in direct response to over-sensational reporting.   over-serious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1622    G. Wither Faire-virtue sig. Fv  				If you truely note her Face, You shall find it hath a grace, Neither wanton, nor ore serious. 1888    Mrs. H. Ward Robert Elsmere II.  iii. xix. 144  				These two people..were perhaps always over-serious, over-sensitive. 1999    Pi Mag 		(Univ. Coll. London Union)	 Feb. 12/1  				An awkward and stilted storyline that exists as an over-serious attempt to justify the B-boy life style.   over-servile adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1626    F. Bacon Valerius Terminus in  Lett. & Remains 		(1734)	 xxi. 447  				Of the impediments which have been in the two extream humours of admiration of antiquity and love of novelty, and again of over-servile reverence, or over-light scorn of the opinions of others. 1670    C. Cotton tr.  G. Girard Hist. Life Duke of Espernon  iii. x. 478  				Had he not expected from his friends an over-servile, and submiss regard. 2002    Translation Jrnl. 		(Electronic text)	 6 No. 4  				The proposed translation of ‘obligeance’ as ‘obsequiousness’ may overemphasise the strength of the original ST [sc. source text] term yet the mockingly over-servile attitude aimed at being conveyed by the author is respected.   over-severe adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ society > authority > strictness > 			[adjective]		 > severe or stern > excessively severe overhardc1390 oversharpa1500 over-severe1586 the world > action or operation > behaviour > bad behaviour > harshness or severity > 			[adjective]		 > excessively overhardc1390 oversharpa1500 over-severe1586 over-harsha1633 1586    T. Bowes tr.  P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. 593  				It falleth out so, that an ouer-seuere Magistrate becommeth odious. 1824    W. Scott Redgauntlet in  Waverley Novels II. 43  				I must not put their patience to an over severe trial. 1988    Econ. Jrnl. 98 691  				This is an asymptotic test uncorrected for degrees of freedom, so it is probably somewhat over-severe given the rather small sample.   over-shy adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1696    C. Cibber Love's Last Shift  iii. 47  				Prithee Cousin, who's that over-shy Lady there, that won't seem to understand what that Brisk young fellow says to her? 1752    C. Lennox Female Quixote I.  ii. ix. 135  				The inconsiderate Julia..was not over-shy, any more than yourself, of granting Favours. 1992    Kitchener-Waterloo 		(Ont.)	 Record 		(Nexis)	 26 Dec.  f3  				Introductions are arranged with planeloads of overshy or just plain repugnant men.   over-sick adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1674    R. Herrick Poet. Wks. 		(1915)	 52  				Never was Day so over-sick with showres, But that it had some intermitting houres. 1997    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 27 Sept.  a1  				You can get overwhelmed with these oversick (very ill) patients nobody wants to do. ΚΠ 1611    R. Fenton Treat. Vsurie 110  				Our sluggish modesty in being ouer silent.   over-simple adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1611    R. Fenton Treat. Vsurie 33  				They are therfore ouer simple, who doe imagine that humane authoritie is alleaged to adde authoritie vnto Scripture. 1940    Scrutiny 9 51  				To say that singer's opera is artificial and realistic opera natural is, then, patently oversimple.   over-slack adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1565    T. Chaloner tr.  Ovid Epistolæ Heroidum 		(1804)	 II.  xvii 379  				But now to com for pleasures past And joies enjoyed, I say Thy hope was overslacke, An other hath got thy pray. 1879    E. Arnold Light of Asia  vi. 145  				The string o'erstretched breaks, and the music flies; The string o'erslack is dumb, and music dies.   over-slavish adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  i. xix. 193  				He shewed himselfe lustfull and wanton, and overslavish to a beautifull face. 1999    Re: Is there Anything Wrong with this Paragraph? in  alt.usage.english 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 30 Oct.  				I don't believe in over-slavish devotion..to rules.   over-slight adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1605    J. Marston Dutch Courtezan p. i  				And if our pen in this seeme ouer slight, We striue not to instruct, but to delight. 1645    Bp. J. Hall Remedy Discontentm. viii. 38  				This Chicken, that Partridge or Phesant, would (as over-slight food) bee too soon turned over. 2002    Stage 		(Nexis)	 14 Mar. 15  				This is a[n] effective device at times..yet there is a niggling feeling it disguises an over-slight script. ΚΠ 1608    J. Sylvester tr.  G. de S. Du Bartas Deuine Weekes & Wks. 		(new ed.)	  ii. iv. iv  				This Ladder, slippery plac't, doth slide from under: That, over-sloap, snaps in the midst asunder.   over-small adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1583    A. Nowell et al.  True Rep. Disput. E. Campion sig. F4v  				The print was ouer small. 1639    T. Fuller Hist. Holy Warre  ii. xlvi. 107  				These curious observations (like over-small watches) not one of a hundred goeth true. 1956    ‘C. Blackstock’ Dewey Death i. 13  				The strange fact that over-large writing was as invisible as over-small.   over-soft adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1450    Pater Noster Richard Ermyte 		(Westm. Sch. 3)	 		(1967)	 54 (MED)  				Þe leche..in gederyng of gresses & temperyng & makyng of salue..ordeyneþ..þat þei ne be ouerhote ne ouercolde, ne ouerbytand ne ouersofte. 1617    J. Woodall Surgions Mate 		(1653)	 166  				How to compose them [sc. pills] in a fit consistence if they be oversoft. 1969    Sociometry 32 210  				Contrasts and comparisons of behaviors (for example, in deciding when the vocal intensity was overloud or oversoft) were made for only this section.   over-solemn adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1894    R. B. W. Noel Mod. Faust  vi, in  Coll. Poems 		(1902)	 419  				He will beguile Old over-solemn Faces to smile! 1968    Jrnl. Higher Educ. 39 417/1  				A touch of humor here and there would have relieved oversolemn passages of soul-searching and self-analysis.   over-sour adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1400						 (c1378)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Laud 581)	 		(1869)	 B.  xiii. 43 (MED)  				Þei ete mete of more coste..Ac her sauce was ouer-soure & vnsauourely grounde, In a morter, post-mortem of many bitter peyne. 1999    R. Nichols tr.  H. Halbreich Arthur Honegger xvii. 587  				When my over-sour reasoning seems to you to go too far.   over-spacious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1617    S. Hieron Wks. 		(1620)	 I. Ded. 649  				My building..is but small: it will be a blemish to make my entry into it ouerspacious. 1969    Internat. Affairs 45 539  				An over-spacious layout and an orgy of often undistinguished photos.   over-squeamish adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1592    R. Greene Comicall Hist. Alphonsus 		(1599)	 sig. H2v  				Beware you do not ouersqueamish wax. 1862    Harper's Mag. Apr. 600/2  				He had been glad to do some of that not over-squeamish editor's not very nicest work. 1956    R. Tyler Emperor Charles V ix. 191  				He was not over-squeamish as to the means by which he gained his ends. ΚΠ 1579    G. Harvey Let.-bk. 		(1884)	 73  				The rest in a manner ar..overstale for so queynte and queasye a worlde. 1896    R. Kipling Seven Seas 2  				Hold ye the Faith—the Faith our Fathers sealàd us; Whoring not with visions—overwise and overstale.   over-stately adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1542    N. Udall tr.  Erasmus Apophthegmes  ii. f. 275  				Tarquinius the proude..for his high mynde and ouer stately vsyng his citezens..encurred their mortall disdaigne and hatered. 1606    Returne from Pernassus  iii. ii  				Knights, Lords, & lawyers should be log'd & dwel Within those ouer stately heapes of stone. 1940    Times 18 July 5/6  				Our over-stately cavalcade halted to seek the name of a mysterious village. ΚΠ a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 27999  				If þou..loked wit ouur stedfast sight. 1561    T. Hoby tr.  B. Castiglione Courtyer  iii. sig. Gg.iiv  				More then once through the vnchaungeable and ouerstedfaste honestie of a woman was nighe deathes doore.   over-steady adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1677    R. Gilpin Dæmonol. Sacra 		(1867)	 123  				An oversteady and earnest fixing the eye weakens the sight, and renders the object less truly discernible to us. 1934    C. P. Snow Search  iv. iii. 392  				I've thought about lots of other jobs... But I've never changed. And, Lord knows, I'm not an over steady man.   over-stiff adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1655    T. Gouge Narr. Life Dr. Gouge in  W. Gouge  & T. Gouge Learned Comm. Hebrewes sig. b2  				To be over-stiff in holding one thing, or other therein, to the disturbance of the peace of the Church, cometh near to Schisme. 1885    T. Mozley Reminisc. Towns 		(ed. 2)	 I. lxv. 438  				He was a little over-stiff and staid, but he had to be reserved. 1962    Proc. Royal Soc. A. 266 57  				The orthogonal relations derived below do not apply to overstiff triangulated frames.   over-studious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1607    C. Lever Queene Elizabeths Teares sig. Gv  				They vex themselues with ouer studious care, To malice her, so much they enuious were. 1844    E. S. Wortley Ernest Mountjoy  i. i. 2  				The result of a boyish enthusiasm and passion for the marvellous, together with over-studious habits when he was quite a youth. 1990    R. Jordan Eye of World ii. 20  				He straightened..turning his attention back to an over-studious tamping of his pipe with a thick thumb. ΚΠ 1667    H. More Divine Dialogues 		(1713)	  i. xv. 31  				These are over-sublime reaches of some high-soaring Wits, that think they never fly high enough till they fly out of the sight of common Sense and Reason.   over-superstitious adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1656    J. Hales Golden Remains 		(1659)	  ii. 136  				A nice, minute, and over-superstitious diligence. 1661    Princess Cloria  iii. 338  				To be so over superstitious in her bashful modesty, that she did not consummate the marriage with Narcissus, when she had the occasion offered. 1993    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 23 May  ix. 4/5  				That's the kind of thing I have to avoid because I tend to be oversuperstitious anyway.   over-sure adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1671    J. Milton Paradise Regain'd  ii. 142  				Perswasion over-sure .       View more context for this quotation 1990    Yale French Stud. No. 78. 60  				Saving himself that way, too, as it were, and always oversure of finding salvation in the game itself.   over-susceptible adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1843    T. S. Fay Hoboken I. xxv. 161  				The boy was not generally thought over-susceptible, but he certainly was enough so to feel the difference between [etc.]. 1966    Eng. Stud. 47 286  				The connection..is made by the over-susceptible sensibility of Emily.   over-tame adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1711    Ld. Shaftesbury Characteristicks III. Misc.  v. ii. 293  				The Personages who sustain the sceptical or objecting Parts, are over-tame and tractable in their Disposition. 1937    Times 16 Nov. 19/6  				They had become overtame; they quacked at the front door from dawn to dusk.   over-tart adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1659    G. Wither Salt upon Salt in  Misc. Wks. 		(1872–7)	 IV. 26  				Excuse my zeal, if over-tart I seem In this point. 1725    R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at Seminary  				The Gennet-Moyle sweetens and improves the over-tart Apples. 1997    Chicago Tribune 		(Nexis)	 30 May 53  				Diced beets..with a slightly overtart champagne vinaigrette countered by creamy dots of goat cheese.   over-tense adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1725    N. Robinson New Theory of Physick 230  				This is a plain Indication that the Solids are over-tense; and the only Remedy to relieve them under this Distress is a plentiful Bleeding. 1862    Atlantic Monthly Dec. 759/1  				Now the over-tense nerves are all unstraining themselves. 1940    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 5 143  				This emergency state of mind, of over-tense emotionalism, cannot endure forever.   over-terrible adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1646    Bp. J. Hall Balme of Gilead 322  				To have thy heart so wrought upon, that this face of death, which seems lovely, and desirable to some, may not appear over-terrible to thee. 1912    tr.  Aristophanes Knights in  11 Comedies I. 95  				Demos. And what punishment will you inflict upon this Paphlagonian?.. Agoracritus. 'Twill not be over-terrible.   over-thick adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?c1450    in  G. Müller Aus Mittelengl. Medizintexten 		(1929)	 60 (MED)  				Put þe erbis þer-to, and lete þam sethe longe..and ȝif it be ower-thykke, pure more butter and put þer-to, and streyne it efte. 1666    S. Pepys Diary 31 May 		(1972)	 VII. 138  				My..sister (who is a pretty good-bodied woman and not over-thicke). 1979    Nature 15 Feb. 557/1  				Similar conditions apply if the overthick crust is produced by rapid sedimentation.   over-thrifty adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1640    P. Massinger Guardian  i. i, in  3 New Playes 		(1655)	 95  				In an Heir 'tis ten times more excusable Then to be over-thrifty. 1957    E. F. Osborn Philos. Clement of Alexandria viii. 101  				We should not live in luxury, nor be over-thrifty.   over-tight adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1844    R. H. Barham in  New Monthly Mag. Feb. 327  				And his long black roquelaure, not over tight, Is marked with strange characters. 1896    T. L. De Vinne in  Moxon's Mech. Exerc.: Printing 		(new ed.)	 II. 424  				Over-tight locking-up of the page. 1995    Afr. Amer. Rev. 29 218/2  				Loosening the dominant culture's constraints like an overtight necktie.   over-timorous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1589    T. Nashe To Students in  R. Greene Menaphon Epist. sig. A  				Their ouertimerous cowardise. a1672    Bp. J. Wilkins Of Princ. Nat. Relig. 		(1675)	 203  				That kind of superstition stiled δεισιδαιμονία, which imports a frightful & over-timorous notion of the Deity. 1966    Hispanic Amer. Hist. Rev. 46 435  				Expressed in terms that Latin Americans ordinarily use only with each other, and most over-timorous North Americans are afraid to use at all.   over-true adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1597    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  v. lxv. 165  				We haue by ouer true experience bene taught how often..the light euen of common vnderstanding faileth. 1880    A. Trollope Duke's Children I. xxvi. 308  				There was an over-true story as to our friend having once been seduced into fighting a duel. 1932    R. Kipling Limits & Renewals 75  				The Brethren..bestowed on me a name Infamously overtrue—Such as ‘Bunny’, ‘Stinker’, ‘Podge’. ΚΠ 1641    Naunton's Fragmenta Regalia sig. E4  				My Lord..drew in too fast like a Child sucking on an over uberous Nurse. ΚΠ 1667    H. More Divine Dialogues 		(1713)	  i. iii. 8  				I hope the Argument I shall pitch upon will not appear over-unsuitable.   over-valiant adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1609    T. Heywood Troia Britanica 115  				But (ouer valiant) Ganimed extends His valour beyond wisedome. 1834    R. M. Bird Calavar I. i. 35  				Raging Mussulmans,..who..run away, a thousand of them together, from six not over-valiant Christians. 1925    H. G. Wells Christina Alberta's Father 235  				Now she came back, over-valiant and rash, but just a girl.   over-vehement adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1586    Sir P. Sidney Arcadia  i. 61  				My eyes (languishing with ouervehement longing). 1881    E. H. Hickey Story of Argalus & Parthenia in  Sculptor 42  				The over-vehement constancy Of spotless love. 1964    Hist. Jrnl. 7 104  				It looks as if Dufferin had not been over-vehement in his disagreement with Crispi.   over-venturous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1583    R. Greene Mamillia sig. A2v  				I thought it but a light matter to bee counted ouer venturous, if I might doe any thing which should shew some part of my duetie vnto your honour. 1867    ‘Ouida’ Under Two Flags II. ix. 264  				One over-venturous Spahi scaling the ramparts had been rewarded with so hot a deluge of lentiles-soup..that [etc.].   over-vigorous adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1725    R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Œconomique at July  				The Pear-tree is now to be minded and disciplin'd too, if Over-vigorous; cutting off all Branches still, that push forward to Half an Inch. 1998    S. Wales Evening Post 		(Nexis)	 5 Sept. 6  				Copsey was ordered to take time out for some overvigorous rucking.   over-voluble adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  iii. xi. 177  				The chief diseases of the Phancie are, either that they are too wild and high-soaring, or else too low and groveling, or else too desultory and overvoluble. 1986    C. R. Forker Skull beneath Skin vii. 321  				Her ‘discourse’..is ‘full of rapture’ yet not overvoluble.   over-wanton adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1596    T. Lodge Margarite of Amer. sig. B4  				The two Cupids of Anacreon, which well shaped modestie often seemed to whip lest they should growe ouer wanton. 1834    J. Blackie tr.  J. W. von Goethe Faust  ii. i. 32  				You over-wanton fellow, does your skin For the third time to itch begin? 1916    E. Brehour tr.  Gregory of Tours Hist. of Franks  ii. xx  				He was over-wanton in his love for women and was afraid of being killed by the people of Auvergne.   over-wary adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1614    W. Raleigh Hist. World  i. v. ii. §3. 391  				The one being so ouer-warie, and the other so hastie. 1946    Canad. Jrnl. Econ. & Polit. Sci. 12 225  				Two particular forms of rigidity which have a prominent place in the argument of the book are those for which monopolists and over-wary capitalists are responsible.   over-wayward adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1586    Sir P. Sidney Arcadia 		(1593)	  ii. f. 89v  				He left one, because she was ouerwaiward: another, because she was too soone wonne. 2002    Munster 		(Ireland)	 Express 16 Aug. (Sport & Entertainm. section) 2/3  				Clare had capitalised on their chances, while Waterford continued to be over wayward with their shooting.   over-wily adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie cxii. 691  				The diuell is ouerwylie for me, and if I cast myself into his nettes what will become of me? 1830    M. W. Shelley Fortunes Perkin Warbeck III. i. 7  				He listened, and his words still enticed the over wily Frion.   over-woody adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1667    J. Milton Paradise Lost  v. 213  				On to thir mornings rural work they haste Among sweet dewes and flours; where any row Of Fruit-trees overwoodie reachd too farr Thir pamperd  boughes.       View more context for this quotation 1991    Commercial Appeal 		(Memphis, Tennessee)	 		(Nexis)	 20 Feb.  e1  				Italy still mass produces a lot of dull, overwoody wines. ΚΠ a1393    J. Gower Confessio Amantis 		(Fairf.)	  iii. 582  				Thus I am..So overwroth in al my thoght That I myself chide al to noght.   over-young adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1583    B. Melbancke Philotimus 		(new ed.)	 99  				Children that be ouer younge for their studies. 1886    T. Hardy Mayor of Casterbridge II. xi. 148  				There are folk whose turn is before mine; and I'm over young, and may be thought pushing. 1998    Re: Dear Miss Demeanor in  rec.arts.sf.fandom 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 7 Oct.  				The problem of babies being raised by overyoung, immature mothers.  (ii)   With present participles, forming adjectives; see also overabounding adj. ΚΠ 1607    Trag. Claudius Tiberius Nero sig. E4v  				If you had beene so valerous As ouer-boasting in thy bumbast tearmes, We might haue [etc.]. ΚΠ 1575    G. Gascoigne Noble Arte Venerie xxxv. 93  				These ouerbragging bluddes, Amasde your mynde.   over-dazzling adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1707    J. Norris Pract. Treat. Humility ii. 20  				The over-dazzling glory of their own perfections. 1907    Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 4 485  				To abandon these over-dazzling metaphors, the proving of a truth..comes in the satisfactory experience to which its assumption leads.   over-demanding adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1949    M. Mead Male & Female iii. 74  				Too much emphasis upon the assertive demanding aspects of the mouth may build a female picture that is over-active, over-demanding, and threatening. 1990    Daily Tel. 22 Oct. 18  				Too many over-demanding neurotics satisfying their craving to be the centre of everybody's attention by [etc.].   over-depressing adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1600    R. Hooker Learned Serm. Pride in  Wks 		(1888)	 III. 610  				Shake off that over-depressing heaviness. 1997    Re: Dark Skies Ahead in  uk.media.tv.sf.misc 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 7 Jan.  				Highly recommended and much, much better than the over-hyped, over-depressing and over-dull Millennium.   over-exciting adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-exciting.   over-grasping adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1830    C. M. Sedgwick Clarence II. xv. 274  				He had a genuine admiration for Miss Clarence, and the extinction of his o'er-grasping hopes was a serious shock to him. 1995    Time 		(Nexis)	 8 May 58  				The constitutional rights of all Americans, she believes, are threatened by an overgrasping, irresponsible government. ΚΠ 1680    Earl of Rochester et al.  Poems 37  				Thus was I Rook'd of Twelve substantial Fucks, By these base stinking over itching Nocks. ΚΠ a1425    Rule St. Benet 		(Lansd.)	 		(1902)	 14 (MED)  				Sain benet..bidis þat ye ne sal noght be ouir-laȝand and þinkes what þe prophete sais..þe fool turnes hys þoght in-til laȝter. ΚΠ 1577    R. Stanyhurst Hist. Irelande  iii. 112/2 in  R. Holinshed Chron. I  				Albeeit their weather were bitter and ouer nipping.   over-pressing adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1893    Harper's Mag. Aug. 335/1  				The finding..such a palpable motive as revenge against an overpressing and clamorous creditor tipped the balance. 1940    D. Thomas Portrait of Artist as Young Dog 122  				I never felt more a part of the remote and overpressing world, or more full of love and arrogance and pity and humility.   over-refining adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1855    W. Bagehot Coll. Wks. 		(1965)	 I. 322  				The sceptical, over-refining Toryism of Hume and Montaigne. ΚΠ 1835    J. Anster tr.  J. W. von Goethe Faustus Pt. II 		(1864)	  ii. 137  				Once more I come, once more, Erichtho, I the gloomy, Not quite the hideous hag o'erslandering poets picture. ΚΠ 1598    J. Dickenson Greene in Conceipt 31  				Valeria, whose ouersoothing humor made her interprete flatterie for truth. 1944    Cambr. Mountaineering 36  				He..subjected myself to a barrage of heavy blocks of ice, which was not over soothing to my temper. ΚΠ 1603    R. Knolles Gen. Hist. Turkes 338  				He was thought ouersparing vnto himselfe, as well in his apparrel as in his diet. 1654    Trag. Alphonsus  ii. 17  				Hath fame been prodigal, Or over sparing in the Princess praise? 1951    Times 6 Sept. 8/3  				Her interpretation..was over-sparing of emotional vividness. ΚΠ a1568    R. Ascham Scholemaster 		(1570)	  i. f. 14v  				Either a slouinglie busking, or an ouerstaring frounced hed. ΚΠ 1647    Earl of Clarendon Contempl. Psalms in  Tracts 		(1727)	 455  				Like over-skilful musicians, who by an over-warbling desire to make the voice not intelligible, are without that vociferation which he expects.  (iii)   With past participles in -ed, -en, etc., forming adjectives (see also overacted adj., etc.). ΚΠ 1663    R. Boyle Some Considerations Usefulnesse Exper. Nat. Philos.  ii. App. 347  				By the over-apprehended unpleasantness of the smell.   over-arranged adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1924    R. H. Mottram Spanish Farm 148  				A frail, fair, over-arranged lady kept her waiting in the glove department of the Bon Marché. 1995    Echoes 30 Sept. 28/1  				Footprint..is so over-arranged I can't play it.   over-blessed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1603    Bp. J. Hall Kings Prophecie xlv. sig. B6  				Then shall my Suffolke (Englands Eden hight As England is the worlds) be ouer blest And surfet of the ioy of that deare sight. 1837    N. H. Bannister England's Iron Days  ii. i. 15  				An earl's son, and, one not quite an ass, 'Though peradventure, not o'er bless'd with brains. 2001    Internat. Wristwatch No. 64. 71  				While the modern Lange Perpetual does enjoy a few extra touches the watch doesn't seem to have become over-blessed with functions.   over-borrowed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1934    Times 26 Nov. 21/5  				[He] annoyed the settlers by stating that the colony was ‘over-borrowed’—i.e., that the service of existing loans exceeded the taxable capacity of the colony. 1987    Courier-Mail 		(Brisbane)	 23 Nov. 21/1  				It's not just the odd over-borrowed financial adventurer from the corporate world who is in a spot of bother now. ΚΠ 1840    C. Norton Dream 117  				Her startled child, Whose innate sense of justice seem'd to show Him over-chidden, being chidden so.   over-complicated adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1889    M. Arnold Rep. Elem. Schools 		(1889)	 238  				If our over-complicated machinery for grants on class subjects and on specific subjects is found to interfere with the due following out of a sound programme. 1999    Financial Times 9 Oct. 6/4  				With life assurance Isas, the government..came up with an over-complicated product of little appeal.   over-concerned adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1721    C. Cibber Refusal  iii. 51  				Poor Lady! she is a little apt to be over-concern'd for her Poetry. 1941    Mind 50 2  				You are under-concerned about the cases which don't trouble you at the moment, and over-concerned about the one that is striking you at the moment. 1995    Guardian 9 Oct.  i. 12/4  				‘Nesh’—a word which..means being cowardly, timid or over-concerned with personal comfort.   over-condensed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1901    Polit. Sci. Q. 16 150  				The account given, though over-condensed, is nevertheless tolerably complete. 1985    Social Forces 64 223  				An over-condensed summary of Douglass North's recent book on institutional change.   over-contented adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1832    J. P. Kennedy Swallow Barn I. 8  				The gossip of servingmaids, discordant apprentice boys, and over-contented blacks. 1981    Amer. Hist. Rev. 86 867/1  				The vehemence and volume of their twentieth-century historian adherents have blown traditional (and overcontented) liberal historians into well-deserved disarray.   over-controlled adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1844    B. Disraeli Coningsby I.  iii. v. 312  				A burst of energy, a trait of decision, which strikingly contrasted with the somewhat over-controlled character of her life in drawing-rooms. 1992    S. Conran Crimson 412  				Trembling, she reached backward for the telephone. ‘June? No more calls please.’ Her voice was slightly overcontrolled.   over-cultivated adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1832    J. K. Paulding Westward Ho! I. ii. 13  				At length it gave up the ghost, and, like an over-cultivated intellect, became incurably barren. 1991    S. Faludi Backlash  iii. xi. 296  				Weed the Bloomian garden of its overcultivated metaphors, polysyllabic flourishes, and profuse quotation and you're left with a scholarly wasteland.   over-cultured adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1901    Westm. Gaz. 21 Dec. 7/3  				Barbara, do be true to your nicer and feminine self rather than your unpleasant and over-cultured self. 1940    A. M. Lindbergh Diary 12 Nov. in  War within & Without 		(1980)	 152  				One had the feeling that this..man had more of the truth than any of the other overcultured, overcivilized diplomats.   over-dignified adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1644    J. Milton Doctr. Divorce 		(ed. 2)	 To Parl. sig. A3v  				To put a garrison upon his neck of empty and overdignifi'd precepts. 1879    Harper's Mag. Apr. 800/2  				The labor was monotonous, not overdignified, and certainly exhaustive to the salivary glands. 1994    Prague Post 		(Nexis)	 12 Oct.  				The Poles are traditionally viewed with slight disparagement as overdignified.   over-diluted adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1926    in  N.E.D. at Weak a. 15 a  				Of an infusion: Over-diluted. 1995    Nutrition Res. 15 785  				Nonhygenic preparation of over-diluted formula or starch gruels. ΚΠ 1688    J. Norris Theory & Regulation Love  ii. v. 133  				With as much unwillingness and reluctancy as the Soul leaves her over-distemper'd Body.   over-distended adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1824    Lancet 13 Nov. 199/2  				The larger arteries..are alike overdistended. 2000    European Jrnl. Pediatric Surg. 10 328  				Repeated scans showed overdistended hyperechogenic lungs with inverted diaphragm and a dilated trachea.   over-dulled adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1410    in  C. Horstmann Yorkshire Writers 		(1896)	 II. 444 (MED)  				A þat ouer-dulled slouthe, þe whiche þus scharpe prikkes been to blunte for to stire. 1997    Lloyd's List 		(Nexis)	 12 Aug. 5  				Those whose senses have not become over dulled will have spotted..news that [etc.].   over-edited adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1887    Amer. Jrnl. Philol. 8 512  				It is bad enough to be flooded with unnecessary and perfunctory editions of already over-edited school classics. 1978    G. Greene Human Factor  vi. ii. 322  				It was the commentary by the old comrade which took up all the space, like the footnotes of an over-edited book.   over-emotionalized  adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1901    Atlantic Monthly Nov. 650/1  				I don't suppose one man out of a thousand would have done other than you did,—let an overemotionalized girl love him. 1938    R. G. Collingwood Princ. Art iii. 52  				Plato..thinks that the new art of the decadence is the art of an over-excited, over-emotionalized world.   over-enamoured adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1622    G. Wither Faire-virtue sig. I2  				Perhaps her outward grace, Here discrib'd, hath tane such place, In some ore-enamourd breast. 1743    E. Young Complaint: Night the Fifth 56  				Some, o'er-enamour'd of their Bags, run mad. 1993    Electronic Learning 		(Nexis)	 Jan. 50  				In a world often overenamored of change for change's sake.   over-enlarged adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1593    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  i. xi. 82  				With pressed and heaped and euen ouer-inlarged measure. 1994    Callaloo 17 827  				Vega's stories use humor to..deflate over-enlarged male egos.   over-expanded adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1876    J. B. L. Warren Soldier of Fortune  ii. i. 63  				Gone like the shadow of a rose petal, When the great mother-flower dissolves in fragments Her o'er-expanded beautiful great heart. 1965    H. J. Habbakuk in  D. V. Glass  & D. E. C. Eversley Population in Hist. vii. 157  				These epidemics..cannot have been a Malthusian punishment inflicted on an overexpanded population.   over-fattened adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1830    J. F. Cooper Water Witch I. i. 9  				He and the negro last mentioned mounted the sluggish and over-fattened horses, and gallopped..several miles deeper into the island. 1988    Nation's Restaurant News 		(Nexis)	 26 Sept.  f3  				The Reagan administration's original pledge to sharply reduce the overfattened bureaucracy.   over-formed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877    S. J. Owen in  Marquess Wellesley Select. Despatches Introd. p. xlv  				Wellesley..was anxious to secure fresh and malleable ‘material’, rather than overformed or misformed agents. 1967    Jrnl. Risk & Insurance 34 377/2  				Recent years have seen life insurers continue to be under-capitalized and ‘over-formed’.   over-franchised adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1647    N. Ward Simple Cobler Aggawam 49  				Over-franchized people, are devills with smooth snaffles in their mouthes. 1991    San Diego Business Jrnl. 		(Nexis)	 4 Feb. 16  				More people are leaving the franchise business... Our lives are overfranchised.   over-gunned adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1694    in  Naval Misc. 		(1912)	 		(Navy Rec. Soc.)	 II. 162  				A sailing ship..being over-masted, over-rigged, over-gunned. 1805    Ld. Nelson Let. 2 Jan. in  Dispatches & Lett. 		(1846)	 VI. 313  				The Ventura..is over-gunned. 1989    Rev. in Amer. Hist. 17 355  				Ships like the Mary Rose and the Vasa were overgunned and sank on their maiden voyages.   over-handled adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1593    W. Shakespeare Venus & Adonis sig. F  				You will fall againe, Into your idle ouer-handled  theame.       View more context for this quotation 1888    R. Kipling Thrown Away in  Plain Tales from Hills 16  				An over-handled colt falls down and cuts himself when he gets away from the groom. 1956    H. Gold Man who was not with It xviii. 162  				An overhandled rattler.   over-inked adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1930    Mod. Lang. Notes 45 337  				Too many instances of bad letters—sometimes overinked but more usually not inked enough. 1967    R. R. Karch  & E. J. Buber Graphic Arts Procedures: Offset Processes viii. 281  				A heavy flow of ink will cause over-inked copy resulting in scum.   over-interested adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1744    A. Pope Let. in  W. Ayre Mem. A. Pope 		(1745)	 II. 56  				Methinks, it shows an over-interested Affection to be sad, because she has left us to better her Condition. 1995    M. Amis Information 		(1996)	 191  				Frequenters of health clubs were by definition overinterested in the body and often wanted to push it in both directions.   over-jaded adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1615    R. Brathwait Strappado 49  				May you liue, Till you haue nought to take, nor none to giue, For your ore-iaded pleasure. 1725    J. Glanvill tr.  Seneca Troas  ii, in  Poems 250  				When the eas'd Corps, like an o'er-jaded Slave At length set free, lies quiet in the Grave. 1994    Wilmington 		(N. Carolina)	 Star-News 		(Nexis)	 12 Nov. 6 d  				Conveying the sense of an over-jaded adult trapped forever in the body of a 6-year-old.   over-mechanized  adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1929    Times 3 Oct. 15/4  				The multitude of over-civilized, or at any rate over-mechanized, workers who will be asked to seek there the amusement and recreation they like. 1940    Man 40 95/2  				It is rather in the simplicity and poverty of the inaccessible Karakoram than in the industrial restlessness of the over-mechanized west that real civilization is to be found. 1991    A. Wood Hist. Siberia 78  				Overspecialized, overmechanized urban society, where the world of adults is sharply divided from that of children.   over-nourished adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ ?a1834    S. T. Coleridge Marginalia 		(1998)	 IV. 77  				A new-invented verb by the Doctors [sc. hypertrophied]; meaning over-grown or over-nourished. 1889    Amer. Naturalist 23 502  				The ability of such over-nourished cells to go on segmenting only as result of the union of such pairs of unequal dimensions. 2000    Philippine Daily Inquirer 		(Nexis)	 15 Mar. 9  				Policemen who've grown uhhh, overnourished, by helping themselves to free meals at the expense of hapless carinderia owners.   over-offended adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1712    R. Steele Spectator No. 266. ⁋1  				Will. Honeycomb calls these over-offended Ladies, the Outragiously Virtuous. 2000    Africa News 		(Nexis)	 13 Oct.  				Why should the Igbo ministers, government appointees, professionals and private personalities cower beneath a bawling Obasanjo at the supreme expense of their over-offended ethnic group?   over-oiled adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1897    M. Kingsley Trav. W. Afr. 100  				Paraffin good for over-oiled boots. 1994    Clothes Show Mag. May 26/2  				Screaming and cheering at each glimpse of over-oiled flesh, teenagers and thirtysomethings alike are far from shy about revealing their basic instincts.   over-packed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1839    N. P. Willis in  Corsair 9 Nov. 544/1  				Carriages of the neighbouring gentry, with ‘bodkins’ and over-packed dickeys, all in costume. 1994    Pacific Affairs 67 339  				This compounded the urban malaise of overpacked buses, reduced car speed and worsened traffic congestion.   over-padded adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1920    J. G. Brooks Labor's Challenge to Social Order xi. 198  				Unorganized labor as well as syndicalists already express their dread of the ‘over-padded State’. 1957    Shakespeare Q. 8 469  				Dudley Jones was a delightful ‘little-man’-sized Dogberry—a pleasant change from the over-padded variety.   over-pampered adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie iii. 17  				They play the ouer~pampered Iades which fall to kicking against their maisters. 1853    C. Mathews Calmstorm  iv. viii. 54  				A banker's coach backed for the rich man's ease—From restiveness of his o'erpampered horses, Pushed him from the wharf's end. 1986    Nation 		(N.Y.)	 		(Nexis)	 27 Sept. 276  				Too many athletes are overpampered individuals who have been told all their life that they are special because they can throw a ball or run swiftly.   over-perfumed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1808    J. N. Barker Indian Princess  iii. i. 46  				These dresses, All o'er perfum'd with the self-same pomado. 1857    W. Bagehot Coll. Wks. 		(1965)	 II. 28  				An over-perfumed softness pervades the poetry of society. 1989    S. Sucharitkul Moon Dance  iii. x. 377  				These barbarian women possessed an innate modesty that many an overdressed, overperfumed woman of means might envy.   over-polished adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1844    Edinb. Rev. Apr. 422  				Sir John Jervis was by nature..blunt in his manner, and not overpolished in his language. 1938    H. Nicolson Let. 22 Apr. 		(1966)	 337  				An ex-diplomatist with those overpolished manners, that boulevard extérieur elegance, which always faintly annoys me. 2000    Marie Claire July 143/2  				A ball in which the dancers slide out of control on an overpolished floor.   over-qualified adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1953    Times 24 Nov. 1/3 		(advt.)	  				Over-qualified man..seeks moderate job London area. 1992    G. Brandreth  & M. Brown How to Interview 105  				You may find that an overqualified person will quickly become dissatisfied and leave. ΚΠ 1594    T. Nashe Terrors of Night in  Wks. 		(1883–4)	 III. 268  				Too much sodaine content and ouer-rauished delight. 1680    A. Behn in  Earl of Rochester Poems 87  				The o'er-ravish'd Shepherd lies Unable to perform the Sacrifice.   over-reserved adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1691    J. Wilson Belphegor  iii. i. 28  				Not much of the Wise, Less of the Precise, Nor over reserv'd, nor yet flying. 1909    Daily Chron. 14 June 5/6  				I find that the character which has been given to English people of being over-reserved is quite undeserved. We have been received everywhere with the utmost warmth.   over-restrained adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1597    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  v. xlviii. 101  				An ouer-restrayned consideration of prayer. 1928    Jrnl. Amer. Statist. Assoc. 23 218  				A thoughtful and judicious, though certainly an over-restrained, consideration of the meaning and way of remedy.   over-schematized  adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1910    Jrnl. Philos., Psychol. & Sci. Methods 7 163  				The author..suggests an elaborate (and somewhat over-schematized) classification of feelings. 1990    16th Cent. Jrnl. 21 665  				This over-schematized picture of conditions in Mühlhausen leads Brendler to speculate that Müntzer might have had to go into opposition had the revolution succeeded.   over-sensitized  adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1912    E. Underhill Mysticism 		(ed. 4)	  i. i. 22  				We are hopelessly over-sensitized for the part science calls us to play. 1975    New Yorker 26 May 18/2  				Blow-up... An over-sensitized and wildly misaccented account of the mod, mad world of London, 1966.   over-sophisticated adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1838    J. F. Cooper Home as Found I. iv. 60  				Much that is wanting would be missed only by the over-sophisticated. 1918    R. Wagner Film Folk i. 12  				But that was before the film fans became oversophisticated. 1993    N.Y. Times 7 Nov.  ii. 35/4  				We didn't want to become oversophisticated in some way; it had to have the sense of a party.   over-speculated adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1954    Systematic Zool. 3 128/2  				A careful and dispassionate analysis of some of the most overspeculated-upon fossils ever to be unearthed.]			 1971    D. Potter Brit. Elizabethan Stamps xv. 163  				Prices began to rise on all sides. Only the overspeculated commemoratives failed to make progress.   over-spiritualized  adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1892    W. Winter Shadows of Stage xii. 199  				That corroding, haunted gloom that comes of an over-spiritualised state of suffering, longing, questioning, doubting humanity. 1960    19th-cent. Fiction 15 214  				As overspiritualized modern man he is equally blind to Eustacia's primitiveness.   over-structured adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1951    G. W. Allport Use Personal Documents Psychol. Sci. xii. 167  				A theoretical mind but one not overstructured with detailed convictions. 1990    Times Educ. Suppl. 7 Sept. 19/1  				How controlled will the group be on site? Will the experience be over-structured?   over-sugared adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1854    T. Martin Correggio  ii. 45  				And what an over-sugar'd smile? The picture's excellent. 1994    Speculum 69 1090  				He regards a dining table sagging with overvaried, overspiced, oversugared dishes as blasphemous. ΚΠ 1789    H. L. Piozzi Observ. Journey France I. 186  				Like over-swilled voters at an election.   over-tamed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1607    E. Topsell Hist. Foure-footed Beastes 63  				It [sc. the ox] is called a plower,..fearful, overtamed, drudges. 1999    Re: up North in  alt.arts.poetry.comments 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 6 Feb.  				That half-felt sense of what should be that I had growing up in over-tamed farmland.   over-tossed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1643    J. Milton Doctr. Divorce 		(1851)	 v. 32  				Charity ought to venture much, and use bold physick, lest an over-tost faith indanger to shipwrack. 2002    thedwg.com 22 Oct. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				‘We can only hope this trip will do her some good,’ Marge concluded, hauling the over-tossed salad away from Lizzy's eager salad utensils.   over-vitrified adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1783    Philos. Trans. 1782 		(Royal Soc.)	 72 306  				At some times an unvitrified mass, and at others an over-vitrified scoria. 1997    Re: Probl. with Home Dug Clay in  Clayart 		(Electronic mailing list)	 27 Aug.  				Too much spar, and the body is over vitrified and too brittle and it is real tough to fit glazes as well. ΚΠ 1861    O. W. Holmes Elsie Venner vii. 80  				This almost over-womanized woman, might well have bewitched him. ΚΠ 1609    W. Shakespeare Troilus & Cressida  i. iii. 157  				Such to be pitied and ore-rested seeming, He acts thy greatnesse in.  (iv)   With adjectives in -ed formed on nouns, forming adjectives (many of them ad hoc formations) with the sense ‘provided with an excess of (the specified commodity, attribute, etc.)’; see also oversexed adj., etc.   over-ambitioned adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1661    R. Boyle Some Considerations Style Script. 175  				Out of a Criminal fondnesse of the over-ambition'd Title of a Wit. 2002    home.arcor.de 4 Nov. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				She thought of herself as a better snub fighter jockey than any man and she used every little opportunity to try to prove it. To say she was over-ambitioned was an understatement.   over-brained adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1650    N. Ward Discolliminium 17  				Over-brain'd Burrow-headed Men, restlesse in studying new things. 1934    E. Pound Eleven New Cantos xxxv. 24  				We find the land over-brained.   over-churched adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1869    H. James Let. 13 Oct. 		(1974)	 I. 150  				I have not yet opened the chapter of churches, having been recently rather over-churched. 1934    Sun 		(Baltimore)	 27 Nov. 22/8 		(heading)	  				County districts are overchurched. 1986    Times 27 May 12/6  				Kent is nowhere near so over-churched as some areas. ΚΠ 1857    E. FitzGerald Lett. 		(1889)	 I. 243  				Spedding's first volume of Bacon is out; some seven hundred pages; and the Reviews already begin to think it over-commentaried. ΚΠ 1888    J. A. Froude Eng. in W. Indies 357  				If she [sc. England] decides that her hands are too full, that she is over-empired and cannot attend to them.   over-garrisoned adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1845    B. Disraeli Sybil III.  v. i. 2  				I hear they have sent the guards down by a special train, and a hundred more of the police. London is not overgarrisoned. 1998    Re: Celts rebuff Saxon Invasions in  soc.history.what-if 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 15 Feb.  				Gaul was over-garrisoned at the time and so the troops were available to be used somewhere else.   over-hopped adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1572    J. Jones Benefit Bathes of Buckstones f. 10  				Meane Ale, neyther to new, nor to stale, not ouerhopped. 1995    Record 		(Bergen County, New Jersey)	 		(Nexis)	 26 July  f2  				Well-hopped, some might say overhopped, beer has long been in vogue on the West Coast.   over-leisured adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1640    Bp. J. Hall Christian Moderation  ii. 35  				An overleasured Italian hath made a long discourse; how a man may walke all day through the streets of Rome in the shade. 1925    Amer. Econ. Rev. 15 780  				This energy is to a great extent wasted as yet—to the stultification of overleisured women and the loss of society. ΚΠ 1593    T. Nashe Christs Teares 16 b  				As Archesilaus ouer-melodied, and too-much melowed and sugred with sweet tunes,..caused his eares to be new relished with harsh sower and vnsauory sounds. ΚΠ 1770    H. Brooke Fool of Quality V. xvii. 257  				The fractured harness of an over-mettled horse.   over-muscled adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1924    Times 29 Nov. 7/2  				No. 3..is unfortunate in being very short for his great weight and considerably over-muscled. 1991    Renaissance Stud. 5 438  				The limbs of a figure with gratia should be ‘gentile e distese’, not overmuscled and not wooden.   over-officered adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1874    Economist 28 Nov. 1124/2  				Ireland..has unquestionably been quite over-officered—notably as regards judges. 1994    Kitchener-Waterloo 		(Ont.)	 Record 		(Nexis)	 6 Dec.  a8  				Canada has one of the most over-officered military structures in the world. ΚΠ 1641    J. Milton Of Prelatical Episc. 21  				Reducing into Order their usurping, and over provender'd Episcopants.   over-renneted adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1648    R. Herrick Hesperides sig. B2  				Come thou not neere those men, who are like Bread O're-leven'd; or like Cheese o're-renetted. 1890    C. E. M. Martin Austral. Girl xii. 197  				He is like cheese o'er renneted; so much in earnest that he can enjoy hardly any of the play of life. ΚΠ 1644    J. Milton Doctr. Divorce 		(ed. 2)	 4  				The much wrong'd and over-sorrow'd state of matrimony.   over-timbered adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1674    W. Petty Disc. before Royal Soc. 46  				If the Ship of 50 Tuns were not over~timbered. 1969    Shell Guide to Wales 226/1  				It is certainly a curious house, over-timbered rather than half-timbered.   over-tongued adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1596    T. Nashe Haue with you to Saffron-Walden sig. O3  				Wherein he..so farre out-strips ouer-tunged Beldam Roome. 1860    A. C. Swinburne Queen-mother  iv. ii. 111  				Give me water to cool out This o'er-tongued fever of intemperance.   over-weaponed adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1592    T. Nashe Strange Newes sig. Ev  				His inuention is ouerweapond. 2002    Tampa 		(Florida)	 Tribune 		(Nexis)	 30 Oct. 14  				Those who see the idiocy of our overweaponed culture.  (c)   With nouns.Of these Old English shows examples under  2b(c)(ii),  2b(c)(iii), and  2b(c)(iv); e.g. overeat n., overdrink n., overspeech n.; overbitterness n., oferetolnes, ofersēocnes; ofercræft, oferield, overlove n., ofernēod, oferȳð.Some words listed here are occasionally used as count nouns in the sense ‘an instance of the specified excessive action, excess of the specified quality, etc.’  (i)   Forming verbal nouns in -ing, from verbs in over- (sense  2b(a)), or formed independently by prefixing over- to verbal nouns in -ing; see also overabounding n., etc. ΚΠ a1639    W. Whately Prototypes 		(1640)	  ii. xxiv. 12  				An over-aggravating of faults to make ourselves seem no children.   over-bathing n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1781    H. Walpole Let. 21 Dec. in  Corr. 		(1971)	 XXV. 220  				Mr Morrice is still at Bath..weakened by over-bathing. 1986    Toronto Star 		(Nexis)	 10 July  c4  				Dry skin..is often the result of overbathing. ΚΠ 1575    G. Turberville Bk. Faulconrie 254  				The ouerbelling of a Falcon, puts hir to a greater payne & trouble, than needes.   over-boasting  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1630    Conceits, Clinches 		(1860)	 40  				A cobler newly underlayd Here for his overboasting. 2001    Orlando Sentinel 		(Nexis)	 25 Nov.  h1  				Shmuger has had his share of marketing failures, including..Last Action Hero... ‘It was a hard lesson in overboasting,’ Shmuger said.   over-breeding  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1879    Scribner's Monthly Jan. 431/1  				Over-breeding to trotters is said to have had a pernicious effect on the native stock. 1890    N. Amer. Rev. May 561  				The overbreeding of a very amiable..race, on a soil which will not support them, is what no government can prevent. 1991    Women 48  				The visual evidence presented to us..has implied Black sexuality and overbreeding to be the cause of the problem.   over-cleaning  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1815    W. Scott Guy Mannering 		(1830)	 II. xv. 196  				A knife and fork, which had not been worn out by overcleaning. 2000    New Yorker 		(Nexis)	 18 Dec. 78  				The full effect of this dramatic chiaroscuro is no longer apparent, due to a brutal overcleaning of the face. ΚΠ 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie xl. 238  				Learne that this ouercockering is wicked. ΚΠ 1612    T. Taylor Αρχὴν Ἁπάντων: Comm. Epist. Paul to Titus ii. 6  				These ouerweenings and ouerdeemings of youth. ΚΠ 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  vii. 406  				Over-descanting with wit, had not become the plain song, and simplicity of an holy style.   over-drugging  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1850    Water-cure Libr. 		(heading)	  				Remarks on Medical Habits, in reference to Chronic Disease. Ill effects of over-drugging. 1946    Nature 23 Nov. 733/1  				In his keen observation, in his reflexion and deductions, and in his dislike of over-drugging, More had all the endowments of a wise physician.   over-editing  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1902    Mod. Lang. Notes 49/1  				Sixty-nine fairly open pages of notes should not be liable to the charge of ‘over-editing’ in case of a text of seven thousand six hundred lines. 1985    Isis 76 80  				Overediting may be much worse than none at all.   over-farming  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1943    J. S. Huxley TVA vi. 33  				Over-farming was not the only exploitation. 1995    L. Garrett Coming Plague 		(new ed.)	 xi. 355  				Overfarming was producing dust bowls, rendering the once fertile, feral lands nonarable wastelands.   over-fasting  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §831  				Over-fasting doth (many times) cause the Appetite to cease. 1662    Duchess of Newcastle Comical Hash  i. iv, in  Playes Written 562  				Poets [are] like those Bodyes that becomes lean by over-fasting. 1999    Jerusalem Rep. 		(Nexis)	 5 July 28  				Discussions of overfasting in Tractate Ta'anit [of the Talmud].   over-grasping  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1673    E. Coles Pract. Disc. God's Sovereignty 24  				By over-grasping we may sprain our Hands, and unfit 'em for Service otherwise within their compass. 1999    Amer. Polit. Sci. Rev. 93 625  				If the unjust person were not excessively devoted to goods like honor, money, or power, the community would be better off, for such overgrasping inevitably leads to social disorder and mastery.   over-judging  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1640    E. Reynolds Treat. Passions xxvii  				The overflowing of their fears seems to have been grounded on the overjudging of an adverse power. 2000    Re: Communication Training in  misc.kids.moderated 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 31 Oct.  				Misstating one's subjectivity can become an error of over-judging (‘vanilla is an awful flavor’).   over-liking  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1597    J. Payne Royall Exchange 6  				To increase your..longinge vpwards, and to decrease all over~lyking here beneathe. 1631    W. Cornwallis Ess. 		(ed. 2)	  ii. xlix. 309  				The flattered have the disease of over-liking. 1966    Sociometry 29 205  				Over-liking (liking more than being liked in return) showed significant differences among the six yielding patterns.   over-meddling  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1847    H. Austin in  Edinb. Rev. Jan. 221  				Over-governing, that is, an over-meddling by governments with the interests and concerns of their subjects. 1998    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 2 Feb.  a22/1  				The Legislature must try to resist overmeddling.   over-multiplying  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1656    Bp. J. Hall Shaking of Olive-tree 		(1660)	  ii. 13  				Our Romanists exceed..both in over-multiplying, and over-magnifying of it. 2000    Re: A Perfect God in  alt.christnet.bible 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 2 Mar.  				Predators keep any given population from over-multiplying.   over-packaging  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1972    Computers & Humanities 7 81  				Rarely has the sociology of knowledge provided such an obvious example of technology shaping the formulation of research conception as in the over-packaging of most social science statistical analysis. 1991    Green Mag. Guide to Home 1  iv. 59/1  				Overpackaging is employed not only to prompt sales, but as proof of purchase.   over-packing  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1867    Sci. Amer. 6 Apr. 220/2  				Last year, no less than seven or eight corpses..were taken from the carriages of this line..—victims to a barbarous system of over-packing. 1967    R. R. Karch  & E. J. Buber Graphic Arts Procedures: Offset Processes vii. 262  				Repeat until satisfactory, but avoid overpacking.   over-pinching  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1591    H. Smith Wks. 		(1866)	 I. 30  				Her overpinching at last causeth her good housewifery to be evil spoken of. 2002    www.acroassociates.com 23 Oct. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				The pinch gap..is sized according to the wall thickness of the tubing to prevent over-pinching and consequent damage to the tubing.   over-planning n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1931    E. S. Smith Reducing Seasonal Unemployment viii. 155  				Overplanning without customer acceptance is just as bad as underplanning. 2002    N.Y. Times 		(Nexis)	 26 July  a21/1  				To indulge in economic overplanning or try to micromanage the future.   over-ploughing  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1762    J. Mills New Syst. Pract. Husbandry I. 72  				Land abused by over-plowing after chalking, or plowed as long as it will carry over. 1998    Fort Worth 		(Texas)	 Star-Telegram 		(Nexis)	 4 Oct. 3  				Millions of tons of topsoil—once anchored by deep-rooted native grasses before the overplowing of the 1920s.   over-pruning  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1797    Trans. Soc. Arts 15 157  				Nothing can be worse than thinning them by over-pruning. 1989    New Phytologist 113 432/1  				A deficit of photoassimilates resulting from overpruning and over cropping.   over-revving  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1976    F. Greenland Misericordia Drop  i. v. 39  				After some predictable over-revving with the clutch out, they were off. 1998    Transport News Aug. 44/2  				Used with a single downsplit, the ZF intarder would hold back a fully weighted rig with the rev counter at a cool 1,800, and no over-revving of the engine.   over-soiling  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1959    Times 12 Jan. 11/3  				It is advisable to avoid over-soiling and consequent hard rubbing.   over-striving  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1614    S. Latham Falconry  ii. xxviii. 126  				This thing is speciall good for any Hawke that hath taken this forenamed disease, by ouerstriuing, or streining her selfe or other misfortune. 1957    W. L. Warner in  R. B. Gittler Rev. Sociol. viii. 224  				Unfulfilled status aspirations, blocked mobility, the overstriving of the very successful.  (ii)   With other nouns expressing actions or conditions, whether identical in form with a corresponding verb, or combined with a suitable suffix (as -ion, -ment, -ure, -nce, -age, -ice, etc.). More established words of both types (as overbid n., overcharge n., overexercise n., over-influence n., etc.; overachievement n., overaction n., etc.) are treated as main entries.   over-abuse  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-abuse. 1947    Public Opinion Q. 11 331  				The high antagonism of the best-off sections of the community..has tended to over-abuse of the Russians.   over-accentuation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1881    Scribner's Monthly Mar. 926/1  				Most completely do the Collas reductions of famous statues fail to give the calm breadth of their originals, owing to over-accentuation. 1971    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 36 250/2  				Marx's overaccentuation of the conflict of economic interests.   over-accumulation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1819    N. Amer. Rev. Mar. 299  				One thing more, which we urge..as a fault..is an over accumulation in describing. 1987    Soviet Stud. 39 328  				The labour shortage relative to existing capital investment is an aspect of over-accumulation.   over-addiction  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1662    Life & Death Mrs. Mary Frith Prol. 22  				She might well through her over addiction to this loose and licentious sporting have forgot and blotted out any easie impression. 1867    M. Arnold On Study Celtic Lit. 177  				Her over-addiction to the Ilissus. 1936    Amer. Econ. Rev. 26 254  				It is possible that over-addiction to the principle of continuity betrayed Marshall.   over-arousal n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1957    R. B. Malmo in  Psychol. Rev. 64 283/2  				If our theory is correct, anxiety may be considered as a ‘disease of overarousal’. 1988    Natural Choice  ii. 18/1  				Over-arousal can sometimes be a side-effect, and ginseng should not be taken with other stimulants.   over-aspiration  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1928    I. C. Ward Phonetics of Eng. xiii. 115  				In order to cure over-aspiration, it is necessary to tell the pupil to make the contact firm and the release vigorous. 1993    Canad. Jrnl. Linguistics 38 115  				The role of transfer is generally demonstrated here based on a process such as over-aspiration—i.e., transfer and hyper-explicit articulation.   over-assumption  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1867    ‘Ouida’ Under Two Flags III. ix. 234  				‘Oh yes!’ answered Cigarette, with an over-assumption of carelessness. 1984    Amer. Econ. Rev. 74 281/1  				Even indulging in overassumption of quantifiable costs..one can see that the benefits appear to be very substantial.   over-attachment  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1817    S. T. Coleridge Let. 15 Apr. 		(1959)	 IV. 722  				Irritability or over-attachment to my own productions. 1997    Sojourner 		(Nexis)	 Nov. 33  				There's been an overattachment to '60s models of organizing.   over-attention  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1757    C. Powys Passages from Diaries Mrs. Powys 		(1899)	 26  				Poor Mrs. Slater was..taken very ill... We feared..it was..her over-attention to her friends, having the house so very full of company. 1855    A. Trollope Warden viii. 117  				His fault, if he had one, was an over-attention to words instead of things. 1988    G. Palmer Politics of Breastfeeding iv. 90  				The extremes of bitchiness and horror shown by some adults' over-attention to a baby is more than a cultural habit.   over-blame  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1857    N. Amer. Rev. Apr. 518  				M. Michelet would be so blind to his virtues, that his portrait would be false from over-blame. 1919    G. Saintsbury Hist. French Novel II. x. 367  				Admitting..that it is wrong to meet overpraise with overblame. ΚΠ 1597    T. Middleton Wisdome of Solomon Paraphr. ix. sig. M2v  				The one doth keepe his meane in ouerbroyle.   over-civilization  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1846    H. W. Herbert Roman Traitor x. 143  				Despising the Roman..for what he deemed his over-craftiness and over-civilization. a1911    D. G. Phillips Susan Lenox 		(1917)	 II. x. 245  				Not a vice which is shallowly called ‘effete’ or the ‘product of overcivilization’, but originated before man was man. 1993    Washington Post 		(National Weekly ed.)	 19 Apr. 36/2  				Taking up arms and exorcising the namby-pamby demons of overcivilization on hunting and camping retreats.   over-claim  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1880    J. Muirhead tr.  Gaius Institutes  iv. 297  				There is over-claim in respect of amount. 1991    Daily Tel. 27 May 5/3 		(advt.)	  				Now, no one can accuse us of overclaim.   over-classification  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1885    Science 28 Aug. 172/1  				I recognize the same spirit in the present popular rage for an over-classification, unification, and simplification of science. 1961    Lancet 26 Aug. 497/1  				He was..a little bit impatient with the fussy over-classification that was coming into vogue in his specialty.   over-commitment  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1931    Polit. Sci. Q. 46 223  				[Control] of capital allocation to prevent under- and over-commitments to physical plant. 1996    Total Sport July 62/1  				A day of hectic activity, improbable over-commitment and outright disorganisation.   over-concern n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1748    S. Richardson Clarissa VI. cxvi. 369  				She has too often forfeited that peace of mind, which she so much prefers, by her over-concern to preserve it. 1865    M. Arnold Ess. Crit. Pref. p. xvii  				I thought this over-concern a little unworthy. 1988    M. Bachelor Forty Plus 		(BNC)	 132  				It is..important to get the right balance between over concern and lack of care.   over-control n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1919    Outing Mar. 316/3  				This shows the importance of delicacy in the handling of the controls. Most beginners make the mistake of overcontrol; if they bank they bank too sharply. 1986    S. Forward Men who hate Women 		(1987)	  i. v. 110  				It is just as likely that he will turn out to be a misogynist as his mother suffocates him with overcontrol and overprotection.   over-cultivation n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1873    Official Rep. Proc. & Deb. 3rd Constit. Convent. Ohio I. 360/1  				Many a thing that has a very fair prospect of living, perishes by over-cultivation. 1994    Earthkeeper Apr.–May 36/1  				The over-cultivation and erosion of the South African homelands.   over-decoration  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1846    Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 4 Apr. 223/1  				As under-dressing may be considered disrespectful to guests, it is equally to be avoided with over-decoration. 1962    Amer. Q. 14 560  				Walter Smith..spent his fire on over-decoration and inept attempts to imitate bad European designs.   over-demand  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1892    Q. Jrnl. Econ. 6 487  				The demand which previously was an ‘adequate demand’..for the product of occupation A, would now have become an over-demand. 1987    R. G. Simmons  & D. A. Blyth Moving into Adolescence xiv. 352  				In order to maximize the expenditure of energy and avoid overdemand, reduction of tension between challenges should be helpful.   over-devotion  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1851    J. H. Thom St. Paul's Epist. to Corinthians 		(1852)	 54  				If he has consumed time, and thought, and zeal in over devotion to such non-essentials. 1992    Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 119 78/2  				A notable American institution of higher learning, charged by some with over-devotion to a classical education.   over-dilution  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1874    J. B. Biddle Materia Medica 		(ed. 6)	 374  				An excess of water, taken into the stomach, impairs digestion by overdilution of the gastric juice. 1997    Times 		(Nexis)	 22 Aug.  				British rugby can and must impose its own restrictions to prevent the overdilution of the game developing within the home unions.   over-distension  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1774    L. Carter Diary 6 Oct. 		(1965)	 II. 866  				Possibly an overrelaxation may somehow have abraded or infused those parts by an overdistension. 1813    J. Thomson Lect. Inflammation 45  				The pain..depends partly on the over-distention of the vessels and fibres. 1904    Proc. Royal Soc. 73 52  				This..is to be ascribed to its over-distention with the secretion transmitted from the body of the gland. 1985    C. S. Ward Anaesthetic Equipm. 		(ed. 2)	 xi. 202/1  				There are ‘pressure-regulating’ holes to prevent over-distension of the patients' lungs.   over-drain  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1758    Herald No. 24 		(1758)	 2 144  				Weakened by an incautious over-drain of the vital moisture. 1976    National Observer 		(U.S.)	 21 Feb. 13/4  				The exhaustion of raw materials, an overdrain on fuel supplies in the planet's fragilely thin crust, and the dirtying of the equally thin blanket of atmosphere that covers it.   over-drainage  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1860    H. F. French Farm Drainage xvii. 309  				No instance has yet been made public in America, of the injury of peat lands by over-drainage. 1944    Bull. Torrey Bot. Club 71 543  				These areas could not be farmed profitably year after year because of over-drainage and lack of sufficient essential minerals in the soil.   over-dramatization  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1886    Harper's Mag. Jan. 323/2  				In spite of their high coloring and the overdramatization of the patrician quality of Mr. Manhattan. 1976    R. Hill Another Death in Venice  i. i. 21  				Out there was a young mafioso... No, that was an absurd over-dramatization.   over-enrichment  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1860    J. Forster Deb. Grand Remonstr. 76  				The supposed enrichment of the country by the over-enrichment of himself. 1992    Canad. Geographic Mar. 70 		(caption)	  				A condition caused by overenrichment in lakes which leads to massive increases in algae.   over-exaltation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1844    Church of Eng. Q. Rev. Apr. 375  				That denial of faith, and that over-exaltation of the power of the ministry and of the means of grace, which must terminate in Popery. 1973    Isis 64 100  				Subsequent events in Germany tempered any inclination to overexaltation of the American professoriate.   over-expansion  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1862    Harper's Mag. Aug. 368/1  				He..attributed it chiefly to the over-expansion and recent collapse of the paper-money system. 1995    Canad. Forum Apr. 41/2  				Much has been made of the condos, the gentrification, the overexpansion of offices.   over-expenditure  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1849    T. C. Haliburton Old Judge 138  				I wish you'd help me, then—log-roll mine through, for an over-expenditure I have of five hundred pounds. 1990    Mod. Asian Stud. 24 432  				In order to justify to the Governor General his over-expenditure (180,000 Rupees annually, far higher than his predecessor).   over-flexion  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-flexion. 1964    J. J. Walsh Understanding Paraplegia V. 28  				The great majority of injuries to the spine are due to overflexion. 1983    Philos. Trans. 		(Royal Soc.)	 B. 302 684  				Broad curved phalangeal articular surfaces with interlocking tongue and groove systems to strengthen the joint and stop over-flexion or over-extension.   over-imitation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1655    T. Fuller Church-hist. Brit.  ix. 112  				Tell me whether the Ape did not well deserve a whip, for his over-imitation therein. 1999    Sunday Herald 		(Glasgow)	 		(Nexis)	 8 Aug. 14  				A show that rises above both over-imitation and hero worship.   over-importation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1861    G. J. Goschen Theory Foreign Exchanges 73  				Sometimes Governments..issue a quantity of paper money: the natural consequence will be over-importation. 1999    F. Ezeala-Harrison Theory & Policy Internat. Competitiveness v. 108  				Over-valuation of the national currency often occurs, fueling over-importation through undue cheapening of foreign goods.   over-insistence n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1890    E. C. Richardson tr.  Eusebius Life Constantine in  Select Libr. Nicene & Post-Nicene Fathers I. 435  				He was open to the charge of over-generosity..a good measure of real vanity, some over-insistence on his own will and thought as the final standard of right. 1996    San Francisco Chron. 		(Nexis)	 11 Nov.  e3  				The common thread throughout the concert..was an air of overinsistence that clung to every piece.   over-interpretation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1884    New Englander 		(New Haven, Connecticut)	 Nov. 824  				A word of caution may possibly not be amiss against the present danger of over-interpretation of statistics. 1980    Dædalus Spring 271  				One colleague, fearing overinterpretation, suggests that the incident in the barque merely dramatizes the hopelessness of resistance.   over-involvement  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1959    T. Langan Meaning of Heidegger i. 48  				Each aspect of the Dasein's factual fallen state..results from an overinvolvement in what is going on at the moment. 1992    New Scientist 4 Jan. 32/1  				If relatives expressed a high level of criticism or overinvolvement or any degree of hostility towards the patient at the time of a schizophrenic episode.   over-lactation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1866    Jrnl. Statist. Soc. 29 17  				There is far less of over lactation in England than in Scotland. 1999    Emerging Markets Datafile 		(Nexis)	 3 Dec.  				Diseases affecting blood, e.g. anaemia due to overlactation or obstinate vomiting, hypertension etc.   over-laudation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-laudation.   over-legislation n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1836–48    B. D. Walsh tr.  Aristophanes Comedies 78 		(note)	  				Every nation has been addicted, more or less, to over-legislation. 1975    Hist. Jrnl. 18 761  				A coalition of elements fearful of overlegislation and of the ‘People's William’.   over-moralization  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1933    A. N. Whitehead Adventures of Ideas xii. 201  				The forgetfulness of this doctrine leads to an over-moralization in the view of the nature of things. 1996    B. J. Nelson in  R. E. Goodin  & H.-D. Klingemann New Handbk. Polit. Sci. 		(2000)	 xxiv. 564  				Harry Boyte..was concerned with the over-moralization of political conflict.   over-multiplication  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1847    Chambers's Edinb. Jrnl. 10 Apr. 228/1  				It is manifest that there exists a limit to the over-multiplication of life. 1975    Econ. Hist. Rev. 28 204  				Urban growth led to diseconomies of scale (because of too rapid population expansion or of overmultiplication of institutional structures).   over-nutrition n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1855    G. H. Lewes in  Westm. Rev. July in  J. A. Andrew Errors of Prohibition 		(1867)	 39  				Mutton-chops taken in excess kill with the certainty of arsenic, for over-nutrition is fatal. 2000    Cats Oct. 22/1  				Once a cat's basic nutrient needs are met, overnutrition can be of greater concern than undernutrition or deficiencies.   over-organization  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1883    Cent. Mag. June 308/2  				In ways like these..the dangers of over-organization, so strikingly exemplified by the school system of New York, may be avoided. 1998    Amer. Jrnl. Sociol. 104 407  				The groups are effective to the extent to which they avoid overorganization by keeping contracts implicit and modes of monitoring informal.   over-ornament  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1848    J. R. Lowell in  Writings 		(1890)	 IX. 45  				Over-ornament ruins both poem and prose. 1869    W. G. T. Shedd Homiletics iii. 89  				Gaudy over-ornament is as much a fault as downright ugliness.   over-ornamentation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1865    E. H. Plumptre in  tr.  Sophocles Trag. 		(1867)	 Pref. p. xi  				To present a temptation, very difficult to guard against, to expansion and over-ornamentation for the sake of it. 1992    A. Gray Poor Things 		(1993)	 275  				I hate such structures. Their useless over-ornamentation was paid for out of needlessly high profits.   over-provision  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1843    J. Martineau Endeav. Christian Life 		(1876)	 261  				For all that he yet feels, an eternal life would be an enormous over-provision. 1989    V. R. Godwin in  M. G. Field Success & Crisis in National Health Syst. ix. 283  				A clinician's inclination to err on the side of overprovision.   over-rapture  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1706    J. Evelyn Life Mrs. Godolphin 		(1847)	 143  				O with what joy and over rapture [1939 ed. reads even Rapture] did I hear her pronounce it. 1842    E. S. Wortley Maiden of Moscow 317  				And even as 'twere o'erborne—oppressed, By the over-rapture of her rest! 1972    Jrnl. Higher Educ. 43 655  				If results of this over-rapture didn't possess certain potentially disastrous overtones, one could sit back and enjoy the show.   over-recovery  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1956–7    Rev. Econ. Stud. 24 58  				Nor was there any change in output sufficient to account for this through over-recovery of overheads. 1994    Accountancy Sept. 100/2  				These allow rebates of accumulated over-recoveries in previous years against the fees of certain recognised bodies.   over-reflection  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1864    Atlantic Monthly Nov. 647/1  				Such vivid shapes, and emotions so consistent and sustained, even though they were so often flawed by over-reflection. 1897    W. P. Ker Epic & Romance 235  				That touch of over-reflexion and self-consciousness.   over-regulation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1858    Jrnl. Soc. Arts 26 Feb. 230/1  				A colony spoiled by over-praise, over-regulation, and over-legislation. 1992    J. Leslie Markets & Dealers 		(BNC)	 99  				Within the United States the exchanges sometimes complain of over regulation by Federal agencies and excessive tax burdens.   over-reliance  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1833    J. S. Mill in  Monthly Repos. 7 663  				Over-reliance on our own judgment is one thing, over-reliance on the judgment of the world when in unison with our own, is another. 1961    L. F. Brosnahan Sounds of Lang. iii. 50  				An apparent over-reliance on the spelling as a means of identification of dental fricatives.   over-repletion  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1681    T. Raymond Autobiogr. 		(1917)	 49  				In a short time by over-repletion I brought my selfe into a new distemper. 1871    R. Ellis tr.  Catullus Poems xxix. 6  				Shall he in o'er-assumption, o'er-repletion, he Sedately saunter every dainty court along? 1970    Man 5 249  				It is not surprising that substances which are usually applied to give a sensation of repletion should also be utilised in cases of over-repletion.   over-representation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1856    in  S. D. Bradford Wks. 		(1858)	 422  				If the fraud consists in an over-representation of his power to act, by which others are drawn into dealing with him, then it is a self-evident proposition, that [etc.]. 1992    M. Medved Hollywood vs. Amer.  iv. xi. 178  				The idiotic overrepresentation of a few crude Anglo-Saxonisms in today's movie dialogue.   over-secretion  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1919    J. B. Watson Psychol. v. 186  				There is an enlarged gland..with a great oversecretion of the thyroid autacoid. 1997    R. Porter Greatest Benefit to Mankind xviii. 566  				Over-secretion was part of a syndrome whose characteristic features were adiposity of the face and abdomen, hypertension, poor bones, [etc.].   over-self-esteem  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1838    E. B. Pusey in  H. P. Liddon et al.  Life E. B. Pusey 		(1893)	 II. xx. 49  				There is one prominent fault, which people least like to be charged with, though so many have it—over-self-esteem, or to speak very plainly,—vanity. 2001    USA Today 		(Electronic ed.)	 8–9 May  				Manic symptoms include over-self-esteem, decreased need for sleep, loquaciousness, racing thoughts, [etc.].   over-service n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1882    D. G. Rossetti in  Wks. 		(1911)	 474  				With many burdens He loads his servants, But at the sharing, The underservice And overservice Are alike barren. 1981    Jrnl. Human Resources 16 25  				The potential capital loss of reputation implicit in the exposure of physicians guilty of overservice.   over-sophistication n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1895    N. Amer. Rev. Nov. 530  				The American joke, on the other hand, is the product of over-sophistication. 1934    C. Lambert Music Ho!  i. 44  				That modern craving—essentially a product of over-sophistication—for the dark and instinctive that we find in D. H. Lawrence. 1993    Operations Res. 41 1028/1  				This only requires a simple approach; oversophistication would violate the KISS principle espoused earlier.   over-speculation  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1845    Punch 4 Oct. 149/2  				In spite of..gloomy predictions regarding over-speculation, the infatuated gentleman wrote two-and-twenty fresh applications for shares. 1995    Our Times July 46/2  				These days, the 1920s' addiction of over-speculation and buying stocks on margin has been replaced by computer-triggered stock selling.   over-tension  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1852    Harper's Mag. Dec. 54/2  				His hallucination proceeded from an over-tension of the cerebral fibre. 1928    New Phytologist 27 280  				If the over-tension produced within the bladder is only slight, the valve may be forcible opened with a needle.   over-worry  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1879    Appletons' Jrnl. July 54/1  				Thanks to overwork, and still more to over-worry, it is not so now. 1995    J. Campbell Understanding John Dewey vi. 226  				In a world of overwork and overworry..can we expect people to be concerned about engaging in social action?  (iii)   With nouns of quality or state, formed from adjectives combined with a suitable suffix (as -ness, -ity, -ty, -nce, -ncy, -acy, -tude, -ism, -ry, -ure, -th, etc.), and with other nouns of this type. More established words (as overabundance n., over-anxiety n., etc.) are treated as main entries.   over-ability  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-ability. 1942    S. Pepper World Hypotheses 118 in  Jrnl. Philos. 		(1945)	 42 93  				An overability to produce interpretations of a fact any one of which would be as consistent with the categories as any other. 1963    H. Gold Salt ii. 109  				He always wanted to make flyboy, but the brass, you know? rejected him for psychological overability, I think it was.   over-accuracy  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1852    C. R. Kennedy in  tr.  Demosthenes Olynthiac & Other Public Orations Pref. p. viii  				Over-accuracy [in translation] always leads to verbiage. 1940    Internat. Affairs 19 134  				The excellent translation sometimes errs on the side of over-accuracy.   over-acuteness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1843    E. A. Poe Tell-tale Heart in  Pioneer Jan. 30/2  				Have I not told you that what you mistake for madness is but over acuteness of the senses? 1998    Spectator 		(Hamilton, Ont.)	 		(Nexis)	 9 Feb.  e1  				Treatment can control the disease, reducing delusions, hallucinations..and symptoms resulting from overacuteness of the senses.   over-bravery  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-bravery. 1936    E. D. Laborde Byrhtnoth & Maldon 150  				Ofer-mōd, over-bravery, over-confidence.   over-brilliancy  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1866    C. Lever Sir Brook Fossbrooke  i. ii. 14  				A passion-tree..relieving with its softened tints the almost over-brilliancy of the southern plant. 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-brilliancy.   over-capacity  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877    Atlantic Monthly Nov. 530/2  				This over-capacity of production is not merely the result of a sudden failure in the demand for iron. ?1989    Achievement (Brit. Nuclear Fuels Special) 17/1  				The existing plant was traditionally designed with an overcapacity to allow for breakdowns and maintenance.   over-cheapness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1731    G. Waldron Descr. Isle of Man 141 in  Compl. Wks. 		(1731)	  				The Over-cheapness [of law suits] renders them frequent. 1911    Countess E. Martinengo-Cesaresco Outdoor Life Greek & Rom. Poets x. 187  				Martial complains of over-cheapness; the husbandman was left to feed on his own produce, and as there was more than he could eat, much lay running to waste.   over-complacency n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-complacency. 1916    B. Tarkington Penrod & Sam xix. 272  				If there were a fault in these cats, overcomplacency might be the name for it; they are a shade too sure of themselves.   over-complexity  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-complexity. 1921    Mod. Lang. Notes 36 182  				Are we breaking this delicate butterfly unnecessarily upon the wheel, by over-complexity of conjecture? 2002    Sunday Herald 		(Glasgow)	 		(Nexis)	 12 May 7  				The government finally..accepts overcomplexity in pensions compliance has become a serious problem.   over-concentration  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877    Examiner 8 Dec. 1548/2  				Over-concentration may be damaging to the balance of his mind. 1990    Forbes 22 Jan. 68/3  				Robertson admits to some small worries about overconcentration in the retailers.   over-consciousness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1820    C. Lamb in  London Mag. Nov. 484/1  				Breaking down the stony fences of shame, and awkwardness, and a troubling over-consciousness. 1977    Hist. Jrnl. 20 920  				This over-consciousness of their ability to master whatever turned up was much resented elsewhere in Whitehall.   over-coyness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1745    W. Ayre Mem. A. Pope II. 170  				Daphne,..she can no longer bear with this Over~coyness of Sylvia to a Lover. 1840    G. Darley Thomas à Becket  iii. iii. 61  				Nor stir and thwart at once His hot desires by over-coyness.   over-diffuseness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1866    Atlantic Monthly Oct. 482/1  				The stern and tragical character of the subject has been enfeebled by the over-diffuseness of the narrative. 1967    Proc. Royal Soc. A. 298 279  				This trend indicates a slight over-diffuseness of the Fourier peaks.   over-diligence  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1613    J. Stephens Cinthia's Revenge  iii. ii. sig. I  				Ouer-diligence May summon actiue zeale to a defence, Which doth appeare in my ill-tun'd event. 1996    Advertiser 		(Adelaide)	 		(Nexis)	 19 June  				I suspect ‘haitch’ may have originated with an overdiligence about not dropping ones ‘h's’. ΚΠ 1642    T. Fuller Holy State  iv. xv. 316  				The affected over-elegancy of such as prayed for her by the title of defendresse of the faith.   over-exactness n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ a1866    J. Grote Treat. Moral Ideals 		(1876)	 169  				In danger of erring on the side of..over-exactness. 1950    R. L. Munroe in  L. E. Abt  & L. Bellak Projective Psychol.  ii. 124  				The accuracy of the form and the intent of the subject are hard to determine to the point of judging overexactness.   over-expressiveness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1892    Harper's Mag. Dec. 79/2  				The old woman..smiled maliciously, with the over-expressiveness of toothless lips. 1976    Gramophone Apr. 1598/3  				I found a trace of over-expressiveness in such movements as the second of the Norwegian Melodies and the Sarabande from the Holberg Suite.   over-facility  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1874    J. D. Heath Compl. Croquet-player 44  				The over-facility with which they [sc. long breaks] could be made arose chiefly from the large size of the hoops, the easiness of the settings, [etc.]. 1949    Jrnl. Politics 11 415  				There are rather numerous instances of an overfacility of interpretation.   over-fertility  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1727    R. Bradley Chomel's Dictionaire Oeconomique 		(Dublin ed.)	 at Burning of Land  				To abate the Over~fertility caused by the Fire there. 1878    Harper's Mag. Mar. 520/1  				The Ohio rivers are dark with the overfertility of the soil through which they flow. 1997    Population 9 212 		(caption)	  				Ratio of under- or over-fertility by level of socio-demographic variables. ΘΚΠ the mind > attention and judgement > contempt > disrespect > 			[noun]		 > disrespect by undue familiarity familiarityc1410 particularity1591 freedoma1625 over freedom1668 over-familiarity1676 1668    J. Dryden Secret-love  ii. v. 20  				That frown assures me I have offended, by my over freedom.   over-frequency n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-frequency. 1934    Times 5 Apr. 12/4  				If the public becomes exasperated by the over-frequency of such appeal they will be killing the goose that lays the golden eggs. 1970    R. H. Miller Power Syst. Operation viii. 90  				Overfrequency is less hazardous to a power system than low frequency.   over-gratitude  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1855    H. Melville Israel Potter vii. 71  				Over gratitude in the helped person, is apt to breed vanity or arrogance in the helping one. 1893    Athenæum 7 Oct. 490/2  				That sweet courtesy That ever marked his over-gratitude For each slight service rendered to his need. ΚΠ 1583    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Serm. on Deuteronomie cxi. 683  				Ye pride or ouerheaddinesse of ye deceiuers. ΚΠ 1604    S. Hieron Preachers Plea in  Wks. 		(1620)	 I. 505  				Religion, which..the world is pleased to call ouer-holinesse. ΚΠ 1640    T. Fuller Joseph's Coat 109  				Out of an over Imitativenesse of Holy Presidents.   over-individualism  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1861    M. Arnold Pop. Educ. France Introd. p. xxxiii  				I..esteem it a great and timely lesson to the over-individualism of the English character. 1930    Internat. Jrnl. Ethics 41 61  				Phänomenologie is a protest against over-individualism as much as against psychologism.   over-intensity  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1858    W. Bagehot Coll. Wks. 		(1965)	 II. 101  				We endure the over-intensity..of the surrounding misery. 1977    S. Sontag Illness as Metaphor viii. 63  				TB was understood, like insanity, to be a kind of one-sidedness: a failure of will or an overintensity.   over-keenness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1677    R. Baxter Let. in  Answer to Mr. Dodwell 118  				The Lord forgive the Presbyterians their over-keenness against Sects. 1998    Odds On June 10/1  				On this first outing this term he ruined his chance with over-keenness.   over-knavery  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1861    C. Reade Cloister & Hearth III. iv. 92  				What of thy foul suspicions, master? over-knavery blinds the eye as well as over-simplicity.   over-loyalty  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1860    J. A. Froude Hist. Eng. 		(ed. 2)	 VI. xxx. 47  				Her chief embarrassment..was from the over~loyalty of her subjects.   over-luxuriance  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1758    L. Carter Diary 20 May 		(1965)	 I. 228  				Topping to check the overluxuriance of the plant. 1805    G. Glasse in  S. J. Pratt Harvest-home III. 25  				All these sorrows have been heaped upon me, in order, no doubt, to prune the over-luxuriance of prosperity. 1982    Time 18 Jan. 74/1  				We were true to its faults as well as its virtues, but the faults—the overluxuriance, for instance—are also rather appealing.   over-magnitude  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-magnitude.   over-moisture n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §693  				The over~moisture of the brain doth thicken the spirits visual. 1766    Compl. Farmer at Rabbit  				It is over moisture that always causes this disease; the greens therefore are always to be given dry, and a sufficient quantity of hay, or other dry food, intermixed with them. 2002    baap.lt 25 Oct. 		(O.E.D. Archive)	  				Some soils suffer from over moisture temporarily while others are constantly over moist.   over-negligence  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1863    R. Whately Misc. Remains 		(1864)	 179  				In their over-negligence, leaving all to be done by Divine grace, while neglecting means.   over-optimism  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1898    Atlantic Monthly June 762/1  				It may seem an over-optimism to declare that this is but an accident and circumstance of the time. 1990    Harvard Business Rev. Mar. 157/1  				Managers are susceptible to human shortcomings like overoptimism and narrow thinking.   over-plenitude  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1676    M. Hale Primitive Originat. Mankind 		(1677)	 215  				A Natural Consequence of the over-plenitude and redundancy of the Number of Men in the World. 1916    E. Barker in  Oxf. Bk. Eng. Mystical Verse 602  				Beauty at whose awesomeness I weep With over-plenitude of ecstasy.   over-preciseness n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1622    G. de Malynes Consuetudo 329  				The ouer-precisenes therin may breed a great inconuenience to the Common-wealth. 1956    Q. Jrnl. Econ. 70 599  				The overpreciseness of terms..gives encouragement to the statistical model builders.   over promptness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1656    J. Hales Golden Remains 		(1659)	 78  				An over promptness in many young-men..upon every sleight occasion, to raise a quarrel. 1854    in  J. N. Bagg Acct. Centennial Celebration W. Springfield, Mass. 		(1874)	 136  				His defects consisted in an over promptness. He seemed so anxious to reach the work that he sometimes went beyond it.   over-proneness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-proneness. 1959    C. Singer Hist. Biol. to 1900 		(ed. 3)	 viii. 297  				His over-proneness to speculation often made him a laughing stock.   over-quietness n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1682    Sir T. Browne Christian Morals 		(1716)	  i. 38  				To strenuous Minds there is an inquietude in overquietness. 1869    Atlantic Monthly Feb. 186/2  				We might speak of excesses in various other ways, such as overwork or its exact contrast over-quietness. 1998    Irish Times 		(Nexis)	 12 Dec. 58  				A slight sense of over-quietness or monotony that might worry poems so closely linked by theme and tone.   over-readiness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1753    S. Richardson Hist. Sir Charles Grandison II. iv. 55  				Even in the delight she had brought me to take in doing good, I shewed an over readiness, even to rashness. 1880    R. F. Littledale Plain Reasons lxii. 135  				Over-readiness to swallow marvels..is credulity. 1964    D. Crystal  & R. Quirk Syst. Prosodic & Paraling. Features Eng. ii. 22  				We would not wish to suggest that Over-readiness to ascribe meanings to vocal qualifiers is a peculiar characteristic of recent American work.   over-realism  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1882    Macmillan's Mag. 46 335/1  				There have no doubt been incidents of over-realism. 1958    N. Sanford in  R. M. Cooper Two Ends Log 		(1959)	 12  				The future is seen by the peer culture with optimism and, perhaps, overrealism.   over-regularity  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1711    Ld. Shaftesbury Characteristicks III. Misc.  v. i. 262  				An Over-regularity is next to a Deformity. 2001    Re: Unknown Texas Tree in  rec.gardens 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 9 July  				Potential hazards are that too much can promote ‘over-regularity’ (like most tree fruits) and it can stain your lips black. ΚΠ 1658    F. Osborne Trad. Mem. Reign Elizabeth To Rdr. sig. A7v, in  Hist. Mem. Reigns Elizabeth & Iames  				An over-remissness or excess in Sanctity or Profaneness.   over-righteousness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1727    J. Richardson Great Folly Pilgrimages Ireland 81  				The Omissions of other Men [may be] made up by their Over-Righteousness. 1882    M. E. Braddon Mt. Royal II. x. 239  				She did not know how much selfishness..was at the bottom of her over-righteousness. 1986    16th Cent. Jrnl. 17 288  				Philanax's over-righteousness, and Euarchus's mistaken sense of justice are all manifestations of this general lack of self-understanding.   over-scepticism  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1865    E. B. Tylor Res. Early Hist. Mankind ix. 235  				It may be over-scepticism. 1991    Jrnl. Rom. Stud. 81 191  				T. P. Wiseman has recently provided an antidote to over-scepticism regarding Rome's pre-literary phase.   over-security  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1740    S. Richardson Pamela I. 222  				His Over-security and Openness, have ruin'd us both! 1970    Jrnl. Mod. Afr. Stud. 8 461  				A system of greater incentives—but one falling short of over-security..—should be devised for corporation staffs.   over-sentimentalism  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1862    W. M. Rossetti in  Fraser's Mag. July 73  				A work of exquisite childish expression and beautiful painting, brought down to a somewhat lower level by a touch of over-sentimentalism. 1907    Polit. Sci. Q. 22 554  				De Laveleye, whom he accuses of oversentimentalism.   over-seriousness n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1709    Ld. Shaftesbury Moralists  i. iii. 29  				Your Over-seriousness..may have driven me perhaps into a contrary Extreme, by opposition to your melancholy Humour. 1987    Amer. Q. 39 522  				For all its possible overseriousness, it was, in intention at least, for the period unusually tough-minded and self-critical.   over-severity n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1824    J. Hogg Private Mem. Justified Sinner 151  				I gathered some courage from his over severity, and answered him as follows. 1964    Econ. Hist. Rev. 17 257  				The effect..is to apply too severe a deflator to prices in local currencies, the degree of over-severity being greatest immediately following the debasement.   over-simplicity n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1861    C. Reade Cloister & Hearth III. iv. 92  				What of thy foul suspicions, master? over-knavery blinds the eye as well as over-simplicity. 1982    Econometrica 50 1365  				Another possible explanation is the oversimplicity of the model.   over-smoothness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1694    J. Collier Misc. To Rdr. sig. A4  				The oversmoothness of an Argument, is apt to abate the Force. 1966    Proc. Royal Soc. 1965–6 A. 289 541  				The danger of energy dependent analyses is over-smoothness.   over-squeamishness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1768    A. Tucker Light of Nature Pursued I.  ii. 99  				An oversqueamishness and nicety of taste, which renders the imagination too delicate. 1947    Trollopian 2 23  				It is oversqueamishness, he contends, to have regard for wretches.   over-strength  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1847    Westm. & Foreign Q. Rev. 47 335  				If it were poison, we may perhaps presume that Overbury was saved by the over-strength of the dose. 1964    Jrnl. Negro Educ. 33 117/2  				Efforts were made to alleviate the problem through authorizing over-strength for Negro units returning to the United States.   over-sufficiency  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1690    T. Burnet Theory of Earth  iii. 47  				Disproportion and over-sufficiency is one sort of false measures. 1996    A. Theroux Secondary Colors 193  				The ample oversufficiency of purple metal flake five-speed Schwinn bicycles ripping up and down the sidewalks of America.   over-surety  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1596    Prayer by Queen in  W. K. Clay Liturg. Services Q. Eliz. 		(1847)	 666  				That no neglect of foes, nor over-surety of harm. 1912    W. H. Hodgson Night Land viii  				Here in this place will I set down how that the Peoples of the Pyramid were greater to the chest, methinks, than we of this age; but yet do I have no oversurety in the matter.   over-susceptibility  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1838    E. Bulwer-Lytton Alice I.  i. iii. 28  				Why add to that grief by any selfish indulgence of over-susceptibility in yourself. 1955    Science 5 Aug. 229/1  				An oversusceptibility of neurones might be an additional factor in the true psychoses.   over-truthfulness  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1901    A. E. Taylor Probl. of Conduct iv. 220  				In practice it is safest to err on the side of over-truthfulness in one's own concerns.   over-variety  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1661    B. Holyday tr.  Juvenal Satyres 		(1673)	 260  				They will serve ye up, in an over-variety, the dainty birds called the fig-eaters. 1999    Re: How China beat India in  soc.culture.china 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 23 Sept.  				The over-variety of languages and religions in India represents a lack of a unity for the country.   over-venturesomeness n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1892    New Englander 		(New Haven, Connecticut)	 Feb. 158  				She [sc. the Church] must..be slow to encourage over-venturesomeness in practical application.   over-wealth  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1839    E. S. Wortley Sonnets 22  				The sun seems flashing stars and lightnings down, At play with the over-wealth of his own light! 1912    J. Royce Sources Relig. Insight 		(1940)	 vii. 261  				Both our eyes and our ears almost constantly rain in upon us..an overwealth of impressions.  (iv)   Nouns denoting action, condition, state, quality, or anything subject to degree (often in sense, if not in form, agreeing with those in  2b(c)(ii)   or  2b(c)(iii)): see also overcare n., overcaution n., etc.   over-ambition n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1638    C. Aleyn Hist. Henrie Seventh 81  				Rather than over-merit, Stanlie had Over-ambition, (That peculiar sinne, And solemne vice of greatnesse). 1973    Times 18 Oct. 15/3  				His career was blighted by over-ambition.   over-culture  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1830    W. Wordsworth in  C. Wordsworth Mem. II. 221  				Free from..that overculture, which reminds one..of the double daisies of the garden, compared with their modest and sensitive kindred of the fields. 1899    Philos. Rev. 8 548  				Over-culture or intelligence weakens or destroys character. ΚΠ 1626    F. Bacon Sylua Syluarum §300  				Another Cause of Satiety, is an Over-Custome.   over-democracy  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1904    N.E.D. at Over-  				Over-democracy. 1996    Euromoney 		(Nexis)	 Sept. 80  				Hong Kong at the moment has overdemocracy and too much social welfare.   over-dogmatism  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1862    Times 3 Dec. 9/3  				He seems prepared to..see that over-dogmatism necessarily fosters scepticism. 1938    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 3 650  				As defensive over-dogmatism gives way, rebellious over-demands lessen also.   over-effort  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1850    Examiner 6 Apr. 213/1  				Though some of the completest poetical images are contained in it,..it is not free from the appearance of over-effort. 1998    Re: Tendonitis in  alt.sport.racquetball 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 28 June  				Perhaps those who aspire to hit with the ultimate racquetball apparatus..but do not have sufficient capability..injure themselves through over-effort!   over-elaboration  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1846    Edinb. Rev. Apr. 382  				Is not the effect of most of his efforts seriously injured by indefinite expansion of description, and over elaboration of the idea? 1974    tr.  W. F. Wertheim Evol. & Revol. i. 72  				Phonetic spelling could not be realized in Egypt precisely because of the over-elaboration of the cumbersome hieroglyphic system.   over-emphasis  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1858    Nat. Rev. Oct. 481  				The traits are too delicate not to be injured by heightening or marred by over-emphasis. 2002    Guardian 27 Apr.  i. 16/1  				An over-emphasis on emotional response.   over-faith  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1844    R. W. Emerson Ess. 2nd Ser. vi. 203  				The overfaith of each man in the importance of what he has to do or say. 1975    Ecology 56 1470/2  				Over-faith in science and technology, human rights, monocultures, [etc.].   over-force n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1700    J. Dryden tr.  Ovid Meleager & Atalanta in  Fables 109  				His [sc. Jason's] Javelin seem'd to take, But fail'd with over-force, and whiz'd above his [sc. the boar's] Back. 2001    Assembly 		(Nexis)	 1 Nov. 66  				The weld is accomplished with no overforce regardless of speed or electrode stroke.   over-majority  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1898    Daily News 29 Sept. 4/5  				It is proposed to use the over-majority of abstainers in the English-speaking provinces to force the measure on great territories..where the people are, by custom and tradition, adverse to total abstinence. ΚΠ 1628    J. Earle Micro-cosmogr. xlviii. sig. I1  				His ouer-opinion of both spoyls all.   over-plenty  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1400						 (c1378)						    W. Langland Piers Plowman 		(Laud 581)	 		(1869)	 B.  xiv. 73 (MED)  				Ouer-plente maketh pruyde amonges pore & riche. 1582    G. Whetstone Heptameron Ciuill Disc. i. sig. B.iiij  				Their appetites were dulled, with the ouerplentie of meates, and their desires quickened, with the regarde of the faire Gentlewomen. 1997    Idaho Falls Post Reg. 		(Nexis)	 26 Dec.  b7  				Today is a day to recover from the overplenty of packages, food and relatives.   over-precision n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1838    U.S. Mag. & Democratic Rev. Jan. 164  				Applying technical meaning to national compact, with both over-precision and over-latitude—turning politics into law, and all laws into private contracts. 1952    C. P. Blacker Eugenics: Galton & After 112  				It is difficult..to steer a course that shall keep clear of the mudflats of platitude on the one hand, and not come to grief against the rocks of over-precision on the other.   over-religion  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1795    A. Hughes Jemima I. 87  				The..opinion, that over religion, as we called it, shut the door of the heart. 2001    Re: Islamic Cleric held on Murder Charge in  soc.culture.indian 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 5 Feb.  				That is the danger of over-religion coming home to roost through any lowering of guard on elements desperate to make business out of people's religious sentiments. ΚΠ 1871    R. Ellis tr.  Catullus Poems xxiii. 16  				Thee sweat frets not, an o'er-saliva frets not.   over-sorrow  n.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΚΠ 1885    Border Lances 23  				Beware lest in thine oversorrow thou lose the true profit thereof. ΚΠ a1400						 (a1325)						    Cursor Mundi 		(Vesp.)	 2901  				Mani man, for ouer-wele, þam-self can noþer faand ne feil.  (v)   Agent nouns corresponding to verbs in sense  2b(a), as overclocker n., overeater n., overpronator n.  (d)   With adverbs, whether simple (as overhard adv., overmuch adv., etc.) or derived from adjectives (as overabundantly adv., etc.).A few examples occur in Old English, as ofermōdlīce, overswithe adv.  (i)     over-fast adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΘΚΠ the world > movement > rate of motion > swiftness > 			[adverb]		 > excessively over-fast?a1425 ?a1425    tr.  Guy de Chauliac Grande Chirurgie 		(N.Y. Acad. Med.)	 f. 73v (MED)  				If it holde ouerfast, be it remoued wiþ a picecarolez. 1586    T. Bowes tr.  P. de la Primaudaye French Acad. I. 727  				When he sawe the Hebrewes encrease ouer-fast amongst his subiects. 1939    Jrnl. Royal Anthropol. Inst. 69 11  				Poreporena is changing..; but it has not been changing over-fast.   over-nigh adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ c1503    Beuys of Southhamptowne 		(Pynson)	 3304  				For he..cam a lytel ouer-nye. 1886    W. Carleton Want in  City Ballads 67  				Did my own form appear to you? It might have been; grief was o'er-nigh, And—God, have pity!—this is I.   over-often adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  , ΘΚΠ the world > time > frequency > 			[adverb]		 > too often over-oftenc1450 c1450    Contin. Lydgate's Secrees 		(Sloane 2464)	 1642  				To ech tale yive hasty credence, Offtyn goon to Chaumbir ovir offtyn to blede. 1593    R. Hooker Of Lawes Eccl. Politie  iv. vii. 182  				Tertullian ouer-often through discontentment carpeth iniuriously at them. 1976    R. Barnard Little Local Murder iii. 38  				His sports jackets did not go over-often to the dry cleaner's.  (ii)     over-attentively adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1799    S. T. Coleridge Let. 19 May 		(1956)	 I. 510  				His family do not behave over-attentively towards him! 1990    Times 		(Nexis)	 16 Aug.  				A spastic, epileptic, incontinent 24-year-old, slumped on his airbed, wheelchair or bean-bag and over-attentively tended by his parents.   over-casually adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ a1500    tr.  Thomas à Kempis De Imitatione Christi 		(Trin. Dublin)	 		(1893)	 86 (MED)  				Lorde..He stondiþ ouercasuely & like to falle, þat castiþ not all his bisenes in to þe. 1956    Amer. Sociol. Rev. 21 645/2  				The author does appear to have accepted his own culture-bondage over-casually.   over-cheaply adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1744    T. Birch Life R. Boyle 		(1772)	 I. p. xlvii  				I, not over-cheaply, purchased divers private conferences with one of their skilfullest doctors. 1999    Re: Seems Penny & your Senate Agree in  alt.callahans 		(Usenet newsgroup)	 25 Oct.  				Selling off the profitable ones [sc. privatized industries] over-cheaply makes no sense to me on economic grounds.   over-cheerily adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1877–8    H. Taylor Philip Van Artevelde Pt. II 		(new ed.)	  ii. iii, in  Wks. I. 75  				Thou look'st not over cheerily; Think'st thou the Knights have made some way then, ha? 1947    D. Thomas Let. 20 May in  Sel. Lett. 		(1966)	 307  				Did you receive the postcard, overcheerily scribbled with messages? ΚΠ 1606    L. Bryskett Disc. Ciuill Life 53  				Hauing regard not to vse them either ouer-curstly, or ouer-fondly.   over-deeply adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1815    W. Wordsworth White Doe of Rylstone  vii. 121  				If she too passionately writhed Her arms, or over-deeply breathed. 1915    C. J. Hogarth tr.  N. Gogol Dead Souls  i. xi  				Had not the author pried over-deeply into Chichikov's soul.   over-diligently adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1690    J. Locke Ess. Humane Understanding  iii. vii. 228  				This part of Grammar has been..as much neglected, as some others over-diligently cultivated. 1977    Econ. Jrnl. 87 849  				Searching over-diligently for ancient echoes when more proximate eighteenth-century influences and sources are to hand.   over-generally adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1612    J. Brinsley Ludus Lit. xxii. 254  				I feare indeede..that this is ouer-generally neglected. 1966    Econ. Jrnl. 76 247  				Then it considers, perhaps over-generally, the capacity of underdeveloped countries to absorb loans and to service debt. ΚΠ 1697    J. Dryden Ded. Æneis in  tr.  Virgil Wks. sig. c4  				He..left them there not over-honestly together.   over-hugely adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1807    S. T. Coleridge Let. to R. Southey in  Lett. 		(1895)	 523  				I did not overhugely admire the ‘Lay of the Last Minstrel’. ΚΠ c1530    Court of Love 406  				See that thou sing not ouermerely. ΚΠ 1549    W. Thomas Hist. Italie f. 213  				This Pietro Aluigi..entred into the astate, beganne to beare hym selfe ouerstoutely against the nobilitee of the same, and specially towards the Signor Ieronimo Pallauicini di Corte Maggiore. 1571    A. Golding tr.  J. Calvin Psalmes of Dauid with Comm. (lii. 2)  				Doeg..behaved himself overstoutly. ΚΠ 1601    P. Holland tr.  Pliny Hist. World I.  viii. xl. 219  				Toying and dallying overwantonly with the king her husband. 1637    T. Heywood Emblematicall Dial. 216  				Shee ought not also to suffer her selfe to bee tugged or over wantonly toucht, but rather to shunne the place.  3.   Combinations consisting of over prep.   (in any of its senses) with object. These naturally form adverbs and adjectives; exceptionally they give rise to nouns and verbs. As adverbs they are often written as two words, as over all or overall, over board or overboard.  a.   Forming adverbs: see also overall adv., overboard adv., overcross adv., overhand adv., overnight adv., overseas adv., etc.   overchannel adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1855    Harper's Mag. Aug. 416/2  				Their pride lies in their magnificent gardens..and not, like that of their neighbors over-Channel, in their docks. 1885    G. Meredith Diana of Crossways I. i. 13  				Critic ears not present at the conversation catch an echo of maxims and aphorisms overchannel. ΚΠ 1585    C. Fetherston tr.  J. Calvin Comm. Actes Apostles xiii. 50  				They do coldly and as it were ouerfields play with God. ΚΠ 1858    N. Hawthorne French & Ital. Jrnls. II. 132  				Men and horses, wading not overleg.   over-page adv.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1870    D. G. Rossetti Let. 29 July 		(1965)	 II. 893  				I send another correction overpage. 1979    Television July–Aug. 17/3 		(caption)	  				Thorn's mock-up of the Rome entertainment furniture of the future, the elements of which are described overpage. ΚΠ 1600    Abp. G. Abbot Expos. Prophet Ionah 156  				That they had..inducements inough to throw him overship-boarde.  b.   Forming adjectives: see also over-age adj., overarm adj., overdeck adj., overwinter adj., etc.   over-centre  adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1975    Sunday Times 23 Feb. 17/4  				McDonnell Douglas designed a rear-cargo door with four electrically-driven ‘over-centre latches’. They were to close over spools in the aircraft body and pull the door shut against its seal. 2000    Dive Nov. 59/3  				It takes a matter of seconds to set up and the over-centre catches fasten the housing down on to a large, easily maintained O-ring.   over-life-size adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1936    Times 29 Aug. 6/2  				An over-life size statue of Gladstone. 1987    A. Aronson Shakespeare & Rembrandt 11  				Neither Shakespeare nor Rembrandt create overlifesize figures as we find in Dante and Michel Angelo.   over-ocean adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ 1906    Daily Chron. 22 Feb. 3/2  				Mr. Raleigh is at some pains to show how those over-ocean discoveries and adventures acted on the poetry and imagination of their own times. 1986    New Yorker 4 Aug. 38  				She needs all the over-ocean training she can get.   over-shoulder adj.  Brit.  , U.S.  ΚΠ ?1655    R. Baron Mirza  ii. 26  				More then a quarter face,—thus—or perhaps An over shoulder look from this great Mahomet? 1991    J. Barth Last Voy. Somebody the Sailor 105  				Her over-shoulder look this time was mischievous.  c.   Forming nouns, as overall n., overdoor n., overmantel n., etc.  d.   Forming verbs, as overbank v.1, overhand v. This entry has been updated (OED Third Edition, December 2004; most recently modified version published online June 2022). <  | 
	
| 随便看 | 
英语词典包含1132095条英英释义在线翻译词条,基本涵盖了全部常用单词的英英翻译及用法,是英语学习的有利工具。