释义 |
[ oh-ver-ik-spoh-zher ] / ˈoʊ vər ɪkˈspoʊ ʒər /
nounexcessive exposure, especially of photographic film or a sensitized plate to light rays. the condition of having been seen, heard, or advertised so frequently or for so long that freshness or appeal is diminished. Origin of overexposureFirst recorded in 1870–75; over- + exposure Words nearby overexposureoverexcite, overexcited, overexert, overexpansion, overexpose, overexposure, overexpress, overextend, overfall, overfalls, overfamiliar Dictionary.com UnabridgedBased on the Random House Unabridged Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2020 Example sentences from the Web for overexposureAs Hill has suffered from overexposure, other significant women of Everest have gone unnoticed, especially among the sherpanis. Breaking Mount Everest’s Glass Ceiling|Amanda Padoan, Peter Zuckerman|March 30, 2014|DAILY BEAST Some officials appear multiple times a day during a crisis, which would amount to overexposure for a president. President Obama Seizes the Spotlight After the Boston Marathon Bombings|Howard Kurtz|April 17, 2013|DAILY BEAST Thus there was always the threat of overexposure, something that was never a fear with an unknown like, say, Lovato. Exclusive: Disney's Troubling Internal Research on the Jonas Brothers|Nicole LaPorte|June 18, 2010|DAILY BEAST The relatively—by Hollywood standards—private star, had not suffered from overexposure like a Bennifer or Jude Law. The Fall of Harrison Ford|Richard Rushfield|January 23, 2010|DAILY BEAST
Donald Trump is a multibillionaire who boasts that there is no such thing as overexposure. Is Trump in Trouble Again?|Robert Slater|February 21, 2009|DAILY BEAST But when you get down to the water's edge and shoot across the shining river, beware of overexposure. If You Don't Write Fiction|Charles Phelps Cushing The patent-medicine evil cannot be cured by occasional exposure or by overexposure. Civics and Health|William H. Allen
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